Corporate Finance

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How to read this page: This article maps the topic from beginner to expert across six levels � Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analyzing, Evaluating, and Creating. Scan the headings to see the full scope, then read from wherever your knowledge starts to feel uncertain. Learn more about how BloomWiki works ?

Corporate Finance is the area of finance that deals with how corporations make decisions about funding, capital structure, and investment. It focuses on the primary goal of **Maximizing Shareholder Value**. A corporate finance professional asks three main questions: "What long-term investments should we make?" (**Capital Budgeting**), "Where will we get the money?" (**Capital Structure**), and "How will we manage the day-to-day cash?" (**Working Capital Management**). By balancing risk and reward, corporate finance ensures that a company can grow, innovate, and survive in a competitive global market.

Remembering

  • Corporate Finance — The division of finance that deals with financing, capital structuring, and investment decisions.
  • Shareholder Value — The value delivered to the owners of a company (shareholders) based on management's ability to grow earnings.
  • Capital Budgeting — The process of planning and managing a firm's long-term investments.
  • Capital Structure — The specific mixture of long-term debt and equity a firm uses to finance its operations.
  • Equity — Ownership interest in a corporation, usually in the form of common or preferred stock.
  • Debt — Money borrowed by a company (e.g., loans, bonds) that must be repaid with interest.
  • WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital) — The average rate a company is expected to pay to all its security holders to finance its assets.
  • Working Capital — A firm's short-term assets (cash, inventory) minus its short-term liabilities (bills).
  • NPV (Net Present Value) — The difference between the present value of cash inflows and outflows over a period of time.
  • IRR (Internal Rate of Return) — The discount rate that makes the net present value (NPV) of all cash flows equal to zero.
  • Dividend — A sum of money paid regularly by a company to its shareholders out of its profits.
  • IPO (Initial Public Offering) — The first time a private company offers its stock to the public.
  • M&A (Mergers and Acquisitions) — The consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions.

Understanding

Corporate finance is understood through **Value Creation** and **The Time Value of Money**.

    • 1. The Goal: Maximizing Value**:

Managers are "Agents" for the owners (Shareholders). Their job is not just to "make money" today, but to make decisions that increase the "Total Value" of the company over time.

  • If a manager buys a private jet for themselves instead of a new factory for the company, this is an **Agency Problem**.
    • 2. Capital Budgeting (The 'What')**:

Companies have limited money. They must choose which projects to fund.

  • **NPV Rule**: If the project's NPV is positive (meaning it makes more than it costs, after accounting for time), you should do it.
  • **Payback Period**: How many years does it take to get the original investment back?
    • 3. Capital Structure (The 'How')**:

Should we borrow money (Debt) or sell pieces of the company (Equity)?

  • **Debt**: Cheaper (because interest is tax-deductible), but risky (if you can't pay the bank, you go bankrupt).
  • **Equity**: Safer (you don't have to pay back shareholders), but expensive (you are giving away future profits forever).

The perfect mix is the one that results in the lowest **WACC**.

    • The Time Value of Money (TVM)**: A dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow. Why? Because you could invest the dollar today and earn interest. Corporate finance uses "Discounting" to pull "Future Money" back to "Today's Dollars" to see if a project is worth it.

Applying

Modeling 'NPV' (The Golden Rule of Investment): <syntaxhighlight lang="python"> def calculate_npv(initial_investment, cash_flows, discount_rate):

   """
   Shows if an investment creates value.
   """
   npv = -initial_investment
   for t, cash_flow in enumerate(cash_flows, start=1):
       # Discount each year's cash back to Year 0
       npv += cash_flow / ((1 + discount_rate) ** t)
   return npv
  1. Invest $1,000. Get $400 for 3 years. Interest rate is 10%.

investment = 1000 future_cash = [400, 400, 400] rate = 0.10

result = calculate_npv(investment, future_cash, rate) print(f"Project NPV: ${result:.2f}")

  1. If NPV > 0, the project creates wealth!

</syntaxhighlight>

Corporate Landmarks
The Modigliani-Miller Theorem → The famous (and controversial) proof that in a "perfect" world, it doesn't matter if a company uses debt or equity—the value stays the same.
The 1929 Crash → Showing what happens when corporate debt levels become unsustainable.
Leveraged Buyouts (LBOs) → When a company is bought using a massive amount of borrowed money, using the company's own assets as collateral.
Share Buybacks → When a company uses its extra cash to buy its own stock, reducing the supply and (usually) increasing the price.

Analyzing

Debt vs. Equity
Feature Debt (Bonds/Loans) Equity (Stock)
Obligation Must repay (Fixed) No obligation (Discretionary)
Control No voting rights Voting rights / Ownership
Tax Effect Interest is tax-deductible Dividends are NOT tax-deductible
Risk High risk of bankruptcy Low risk of bankruptcy
    • The Concept of "Liquidity vs. Profitability"**: A company can be profitable (making millions in sales) but still go out of business if it doesn't have "Cash" to pay its electric bill today. Analyzing the **Cash Conversion Cycle** (how fast a dollar spent on inventory comes back as two dollars from a customer) is a core task of corporate finance.

Evaluating

Evaluating a corporation's health: (1) **Solvency**: Can they pay their long-term debts (Debt-to-Equity Ratio)? (2) **Profitability**: How much profit do they make for every dollar of sales (Net Margin)? (3) **Efficiency**: How well are they using their assets (Return on Assets)? (4) **Payout Policy**: Are they paying out too much in dividends instead of reinvesting in the future?

Creating

Future Frontiers: (1) **ESG Investing**: Incorporating Environmental, Social, and Governance factors into financial value (not just profit). (2) **FinTech Integration**: Using AI to automate capital budgeting and detect fraud in real-time. (3) **Decentralized Corporate Finance (DeFi)**: Using smart contracts and DAOs to manage corporate funds without a traditional bank. (4) **Climate Risk Disclosure**: Forcing companies to calculate the "Financial Cost" of global warming on their business.