Топик: Financial Planing
5. List the three steps involved in financial planning.
6. In what case financial planning cannot proceed?
7. State the meaning of the word "budget".
8. Give the examples of various types of expenses which must be considered (учтены) in budgeting process?
9. How can budgeting accuracy be improved?
10. What is the peculiarity (особенность) of the traditional approach to budgeting?
11. What is the problem with this approach?
12. What is the difference between the traditional budgeting approach and zero-base budgeting?
13. What is the problem with zero-base budgeting?
14. List the four primary sources of funding.
15. For what purpose (цель) is equity capital used?
16. Is selling assets a normal step?
17. In what case selling assets may be a reasonable last resort?
18. For what purpose may interim budgets be prepared?
VI. Make up a written abstract (краткое изложение) of the text.
VII. Retell the prepared abstract.
Unit 5
Outside Sources of Financing
Financial management consist of all those activities that are concerned with obtaining money and using it effectively. Effective financial management involves careful planning. It begins with a determination of the firm's financial needs.
Money is needed to start a business. Then the income from sales could be used to finance the firm's continuing operations and to provide a profit.
But sales revenue does not generally flow evenly. Income and expenses may very from season to season or from year to year. Temporary financing may be needed when expenses are high or income is low. Then, the need to purchase a new facility or expand an existing facility may require more money than is available within a firm. In these cases the firm must look for outside sources of financing. Usually it is short- or long-term financing.
1. Short-term financing is money that will be used for one year or less and then repaid.
There are many short-term financing needs. Two deserve special attention. First, certain necessary business practices may affect a firm's cashflow and create a need for short-term financing.
Cashflow is the movement of money into and out of an organization. The ideal is to have sufficient money coming into the firm, in any period, to cover the firm's expenses during that period. But the ideal is not always achieved. For example, a firm that offers credit to its customers may find an imbalance in its cash flow. Such credit purchases are generally not paid until thirty or sixty days (or more) after the transaction. Short-term financing is then
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needed to pay the firm's bills until customers have paid their bills. Unanticipated expenses may also cause a cash-flow problem.
A second major need for short-term financing that is related to a firm's cash-flow problem is inventory.
Inventory requires considerable investment for most manufactures, wholesalers, and retailers. Moreover, most goods are manufactured four to nine months before they are sold to the ultimate customer. As a result, manufacturers often need short-term financing. The borrowed money is used to buy materials and supplies, to pay wages and rent, and to cover inventory costs until the goods are sold. Then, the money is repaid out of sales revenue. Additionally, wholesalers and retailers may need short-term financing to build up their inventories before peak selling periods. Again, the money is repaid when the merchandise is sold.
2. Long-term financing is money that will be used for longer period than one year. Long-term financing is needed to start a new business. It is also needed for executing business expansions and mergers, for developing and marketing new products, and for replacing equipment that becomes obsolete or inefficient.
The amounts of long-term financing needed by large firms can be very great.