Corporate Finance B40 2302 Lecture Note Packet 1 Aswath Damodaran Aswath Damodaran 1 The Objective in Corporate Finance If you don t know where you are going it does not matter how you get there Aswath Damodaran 2 First Principles Aswath Damodaran 3 The Classical Viewpoint Van Horne In this book we assume that the objective of the firm is to maximize its value to its stockholders Brealey Myers Success is usually judged by value Shareholders are made better off by any decision which increases the value of their stake in the firm The secret of success in financial management is to increase value Copeland Weston The most important theme is that the objective of the firm is to maximize the wealth of its stockholders Brigham and Gapenski Throughout this book we operate on the assumption that the management s primary goal is stockholder wealth maximization which translates into maximizing the price of the common stock Aswath Damodaran 4 The Objective in Decision Making In traditional corporate finance the objective in decision making is to maximize the value of the firm A narrower objective is to maximize stockholder wealth When the stock is traded and markets are viewed to be efficient the objective is to maximize the stock price Maximize equity Maximize market Maximize value estimate of equity firm value value Assets Existing Investments Generate cashflows today Includes long lived fixed and short lived working capital assets Expected Value that will be created by future investments Liabilities Assets in Place Debt Growth Assets Equity Fixed Claim on cash flows Little or No role in management Fixed Maturity Tax Deductible Residual Claim on cash flows Significant Role in management Perpetual Lives Aswath Damodaran 5 Maximizing Stock Prices is too narrow an objective A preliminary response Maximizing stock price is not incompatible with meeting employee needs objectives In particular Employees are often stockholders in many firms Firms that maximize stock price generally are profitable firms that can afford to treat employees well Maximizing stock price does not mean that customers are not critical to success In most businesses keeping customers happy is the route to stock price maximization Maximizing stock price does not imply that a company has to be a social outlaw Aswath Damodaran 6 Why traditional corporate financial theory focuses on maximizing stockholder wealth Stock price is easily observable and constantly updated unlike other measures of performance which may not be as easily observable and certainly not updated as frequently If investors are rational are they stock prices reflect the wisdom of decisions short term and long term instantaneously The objective of stock price performance provides some very elegant theory on Allocating resources across scarce uses which investments to take and which ones to reject how to finance these investments how much to pay in dividends Aswath Damodaran 7 The Classical Objective Function STOCKHOLDERS Hire fire managers Board Annual Meeting Lend Money BONDHOLDERS Maximize stockholder wealth Managers Protect bondholder Interests Reveal information honestly and on time No Social Costs SOCIETY Costs can be traced to firm Markets are efficient and assess effect on value FINANCIAL MARKETS Aswath Damodaran 8 What can go wrong STOCKHOLDERS Have little control over managers Lend Money BONDHOLDERS Managers put their interests above stockholders Managers Significant Social Costs SOCIETY Bondholders can Some costs cannot be get ripped off traced to firm Delay bad Markets make news or mistakes and provide misleading can over react information FINANCIAL MARKETS Aswath Damodaran 9 I Stockholder Interests vs Management Interests In theory The stockholders have significant control over management The mechanisms for disciplining management are the annual meeting and the board of directors In Practice Neither mechanism is as effective in disciplining management as theory posits Aswath Damodaran 10 The Annual Meeting as a disciplinary venue The power of stockholders to act at annual meetings is diluted by three factors Most small stockholders do not go to meetings because the cost of going to the meeting exceeds the value of their holdings Incumbent management starts off with a clear advantage when it comes to the exercise of proxies Proxies that are not voted becomes votes for incumbent management For large stockholders the path of least resistance when confronted by managers that they do not like is to vote with their feet Aswath Damodaran 11 And institutional investors go along with incumbent managers Aswath Damodaran 12 Board of Directors as a disciplinary mechanism Aswath Damodaran 13 The CEO often hand picks directors A 1992 survey by Korn Ferry revealed that 74 of companies relied on recommendations from the CEO to come up with new directors Only 16 used an outside search firm While that number has changed in recent years CEOs still determine who sits on their boards While more companies have outsiders involved in picking directors now CEOs still exercise significant influence over the process Directors often hold only token stakes in their companies The Korn Ferry survey found that 5 of all directors in 1992 owned less than five shares in their firms Most directors in companies today still receive more compensation as directors than they gain from their stockholdings While share ownership is up among directors today they usually get these shares from the firm rather than buy them Many directors are themselves CEOs of other firms Worse still there are cases where CEOs sit on each other s boards Aswath Damodaran 14 Directors lack the expertise and the willingness to ask the necessary tough questions In most boards the CEO continues to be the chair Not surprisingly the CEO sets the agenda chairs the meeting and controls the information provided to directors The search for consensus overwhelms any attempts at confrontation Aswath Damodaran 15 Who s on Board The Disney Experience 1997 Aswath Damodaran 16 The Calpers Tests for Independent Boards Calpers the California Employees Pension fund suggested three tests in 1997 of an independent board Are a majority of the directors outside directors Is the chairman of the board independent of the company and not the CEO of the company Are the compensation and audit committees composed entirely of outsiders Disney was the only S P 500 company to fail all three tests Aswath Damodaran 17 Business Week piles on The
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