Unit 5: Financial Information and Decisions
Why businesses need finance:
Start-up capital
Working capital: capital needed for day-to-day expenses (e.g. wages)
Fixed assets (non-current): assets owned by the business which is used >1 year
Capital expenditure: latest technology
Market research
Expansion
Long-term finance: loans to finance non-current assets with maturity exceeding 5 years
Short-term finance: loans expected to be paid within a year
Internal sources of finance
Owner’s saving
Retained profit: remaining profit reinvested back into business
Sales/leasing of non-current assets: selling/renting out land owned by the business
*non-current assets may not have high commercial value
Working capital
Methods of using working capital
→ Reduce cash balances: cash used to pay for capital expenditure
→ Reduce inventory levels
→ Reduce trade receivables: sell goods to customers on credit (customers receive goods and pay for them at an agreed date in the future)
Reduce trade receivables by:
+) Reduce length of waiting for payment/offer discounts for early payment
+) Reduce total accounts receivable
External sources of finance
Short-term sources
Overdraft: agreement with a bank that allows a business to spend more money than it has in its account. The loan has to be paid within 12 months
Trade credits: (business buying resources from suppliers on credit) supplier lending money for the cost of goods for the length of the agreed credit period
Debt factoring: selling trade receivables to customers
Long-term sources
Bank loan: provision of finance by banks which businesses will repay with interest at an agreed period in time
Leasing: obtaining temporary use of a non-current asset by paying a fixed amount per time period (ownership remains with the leasing company)
Hire purchase: the purchase of an asset by paying the cost spread over a period of time (the asset is owned upon completion of payment)
Mortgage: long-term loans used for the purchase of lands/buildings (interest charged on the amount borrowed, must be paid each year) (full amount has to be paid within the mortgage term)
Debenture: the business lending money to another business for profit
Share issue: offer to sell shares (permanent capital) only available to limited companies
Cash-flow forecast: an estimate of the total cash inflows and outflows of the business
(if business can predict a period of cash shortage → try to prevent)
Net cash flow: inflow - outflow
Methods to overcome short-term cash-flow problems
Negotiate longer credit terms with suppliers
Delay purchase of non-current assets (until cash-flow improves)
Find other sources of finance to purchase non-current assets (e.g. hire purchase, overdraft)
Liquidity: the ability of a business to pay its short-term debts
Working capital: measures the liquidity of a business
has poor cashflow (can’t repay debts) → weak working capital → illiquid
Working capital cycle:
→ cash
→ inventories purchased on credit
→ production of goods and services
→ goods sold to customers on credit
Length of working capital cycle depends on:
Level of inventory held by the business
Time taken to produce goods
Time taken to find buyers/consumers
Length of credit period
(improve by: reducing inventory levels, credit period, longer credit terms with suppliers)
Types of profit
Profit: the difference between revenue and total costs
(revenue - total cost)
(gross profit - expenses)
Gross profit: the difference between the revenue earned from selling products and the costs of making those products (revenue - cost of sales)
Retained profit
Revenue: the amount business earns from selling its product (selling price * quantity sold)
Cost of sales: the cost of purchasing the goods used to make the product sold
Expenses: day-to-day operating costs of a business
Importance of profit
Measures success of business
Finance purchase of non-current assets, expand business,...
Decide if the product should be continued
Measure performance of managers
Attract investors
Statement of financial position: an accounting statement that records assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity of a business at a particular date
Assets: resources owned by a business
Non-current assets: resources with maturity exceeding 1 year
Current assets: resources expected to be converted into cash before date of the next statement of financial position
Liabilities: debts of a business that is expected to be paid
Current liabilities: debts expected to be paid before date of next statement of financial position
Non-current liabilities: long-term debts with maturity exceeding 1 year
Owner’s equity: amount owed by the business to its owners (investments/retained profit)
Shareholder’s equity: owner’s equity (exclusive to limited liability companies)
Methods of measuring profitability
Gross profit margin: how much gross profit is earned per $1 (difference between revenue and cost of sales)
Gross profit margin = (gross profit/revenue)*100
Profit margin: how much profit is earned per $1 (performance of businesses converting revenue into profit)
Profit margin = (profit/revenue)*100
⇒ measures how businesses add value and control costs
Return on capital employed (ROCE): ratio between profit and capital employed (before tax) (how much profit is earned for every $1 invested into a business)