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1. The document outlines 10 axioms of financial management including the risk-return tradeoff, time value of money, cash flow being important, incremental cash flows mattering for decisions, competition lowering profits, efficient capital markets, agency problems between managers and owners, taxes impacting cash flows, different types of risks, and ethical behavior building trust.
2. The axioms provide foundational principles for financial management such as higher risk requiring higher returns, the value of money decreasing over time, cash being critical for business survival, decisions impacting incremental cash flows, competition limiting high profits, market prices reflecting all available information, conflicts between manager and owner interests, taxes reducing after-tax cash flows, different risks having
1. The document outlines 10 axioms of financial management including the risk-return tradeoff, time value of money, cash flow being important, incremental cash flows mattering for decisions, competition lowering profits, efficient capital markets, agency problems between managers and owners, taxes impacting cash flows, different types of risks, and ethical behavior building trust.
2. The axioms provide foundational principles for financial management such as higher risk requiring higher returns, the value of money decreasing over time, cash being critical for business survival, decisions impacting incremental cash flows, competition limiting high profits, market prices reflecting all available information, conflicts between manager and owner interests, taxes reducing after-tax cash flows, different risks having
1. The document outlines 10 axioms of financial management including the risk-return tradeoff, time value of money, cash flow being important, incremental cash flows mattering for decisions, competition lowering profits, efficient capital markets, agency problems between managers and owners, taxes impacting cash flows, different types of risks, and ethical behavior building trust.
2. The axioms provide foundational principles for financial management such as higher risk requiring higher returns, the value of money decreasing over time, cash being critical for business survival, decisions impacting incremental cash flows, competition limiting high profits, market prices reflecting all available information, conflicts between manager and owner interests, taxes reducing after-tax cash flows, different risks having
- Higher returns are demanded for risky business. - We won’t take on additional risk unless we expect to be compensated with additional return. The greater the risk, the greater the expected return. 2. The time value of money - A dollar received today is worth more than a dollar received in the future because money can be invested to generate returns. - A dollar received today is worth more than a dollar received tomorrow because a dollar received today can earn a day’s interest by tomorrow. 3. Cash is the king - Expenses are paid in cash and cash can be reinvested to generate more returns. Accrual accounting recognizes the transaction when they occur rather than when they paid which results in timing difference between profit and cash flows. A business should pay attention to cash flow because the continuation of a business is dependent on cash flows. - Accounting profit or loss frequently does not coincide with the actual transfer of money. The first rule of running any business: Do not run out of cash. 4. Incremental cash flows - The decision on whether to invest in a project should be based on the project's impact on cash flows. The project investment decision is based on whether the cash flow increases or decreases. - It’s only what changes that counts. Think incrementally. How will a decision change the cash flow of the company? 5. Curse of competitive markets - It is hard to find and maintain Highly profitable projects because highly profitable projects attract competition. - Why it’s hard to find exceptionally profitable projects? Success attracts competition. Competition lowers profits. 6. Efficient capital market - Security prices are a reflection of all information available in the market. Efficient capital market theory states it is impossible for investors to buy undervalued security or sell security at inflated prices because of the security trade at a fair price. - The markets are quick and the prices are right. Security prices adjust very quickly and appropriately to new information. 7. The agency problem - Managers are not the owners of a company and they may make business decisions that hurt the company in the long run. Manager's self-interest such as cutting research and development costs in order to improve profit in the short run may conflict with the business's long term goals. - Managers won’t work for owners unless it’s in their best interest. Most people will work harder for themselves than they will for someone else. 8. Taxes business bias - The impact of tax on cash flow is to be factored when making business decisions because the tax reduces cash flows. The government uses tax incentives to encourage investments. - Decisions using cash flows must always use after-tax cash flows. 9. All risks are not equal because some risk can be diversified while some cannot be diversified - Specific risk which is unique to the industry can be diversified while market risk cannot be diversified. - Total risk is a combination of firm-specific risk, which can be diversified away, and market risk, which cannot be diversified away. (But see the futures markets.) 10. Ethical behavior means doing the right thing - Un ethical behavior erodes public trust and business which cannot gain trust of customers cannot maximize shareholders' wealth - Businesses that are not trusted by other businesses or by customers will not maximize the wealth of stockholders. Perhaps the primary goal of firms should address stakeholders and not just stockholders.