Archive for category budget
A joint strategic planning of credit
Posted by admin in Business plans, bonds, budget, business, communication on February 15th, 2010
Everything you’ve done up to this point has been focused on getting you to the full partnership stage. You and your partner have worked hard together, navigating the Stages of Relationship Development to produce trust and mutual benefits. You’ve also engaged in the steps necessary to accomplish a task in order to determine the partnership’s worth. You’ve used the Plan–Do–Check–Act cycle to continuously improve the task and relationship dynamics of your partnership.
You’ve seen the partnership move from a past to a future orientation. The final two stages will feel almost anticlimactic. This is a good thing. You’ve worked so hard to increase your Partnering Intelligence that by the time you’re prepared to make a commitment and move to full partnership it will feel like the only logical step. The only thing that stands between you and full partnership is one more task: to conduct a joint strategic planning session in order to solidify your future vision and spell out the plans to get you there. Your partnership is now in the Commit Stage of Partnership Development. You have achieved the trust and communication needed to help you maximize the synergy. You have identified the mutual benefits that the partnership provides. Having managed the changing dynamics of the relationship and its impact on each organization, you are now positioned to perform.
Learn how to value corporate credit
Posted by admin in Business plans, Companies, bonds, budget, business, communication, consulting on October 29th, 2009
One of the most widely used indicators to value corporate credit is the equity market. The Merton model formalizes the relationship between leverage, equity prices, equity volatility and credit spreads. While the model permits an assessment of the relative valuation of equity and credit, it makes no explicit statement about which of the markets is currently priced correctly, or if both markets are in disequilibrium. In addition, focusing solely on equity prices and volatility neglects the effects of changes in leverage. However, equity-market performance contains information about the future state of the economy, the future cash flows and risk premium in the market. Stronger cash generation benefits corporate bonds since creditworthiness improves and the required risk premium is lower. Furthermore, as the equity cushion increases through rising equity prices and more IPOs and equity volatility decreases, default probabilities and spread levels tend to fall.
The ratio of credit earnings before tax, interest depreciation
Posted by admin in Companies, Investment Opportunities, budget, fixed costs, management skills, manufacturing, market demand, production cycles, profit margin on October 27th, 2009
A second metric for profitability is the ratio of earnings before tax, interest depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) to total assets. Using data from the national accounts of the United States we define earnings before tax and interest as pre-tax profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustment plus net interest. This metric follows a similar path as the ratio of retained earnings to total assets, although on a higher level and with a higher volatility.
Measuring the extent to which a firm’s value can decline before its book value becomes negative and a firm becomes insolvent, the ratio of market value of equity to total debt represents the inverse of leverage. We have defined the value of equity as the market value of outstanding equities, total debt is defined as total credit market instruments. The tremendous equity bubble of the late 1990s has collapsed, but nevertheless the equity-to-debt ratio stays above the level reached in the 1970s and 1980s. Because of its higher volatility, the ratio is largely driven by the equity performance. As a result the equity-to-debt ratio usually rises at the end of a recession because equity markets already
anticipate stronger economic growth while many companies still deleverage their balance sheets. Here again, the 2001 recession makes an exception.
About one-and-a-half years after the end of the recession in November 2001 equity markets finally marked their lows.
Measure for mortgage profitability
Posted by admin in Financial Advice, Global Markets, bonds, budget, business, expenditures, finances, fixed costs, incentive on October 26th, 2009
A common measure for profitability is the ratio of retained earnings to total assets. We defined retained earnings as undistributed profits, that is, after-tax profits minus dividend payments. Like the working capital ratio, the profitability measure is on a downtrend in the longer term. During recessions the profitability of the companies usually declines. It is worth noting that the latest recession in 2001 marks an exception with respect to the ratio of internal funds to total assets. Whereas the profitability declined like in any other recession before, the cash flows of the companies on average improved in this period due to rigorous cost cutting in the corporate sector.
The Management Function in Budgeting – part 1
Posted by admin in budget, effective budgeting, equity, market demand, market forecasts on August 2nd, 2009
A budget is not a budget until it has been carefully scrutinized by management. Even if the numbers add up correctly, they may not have been estimated properly. It’s middle-management’s job to assemble the budget, but it’s upper-management’s job to question the budget. They do this because the budget is the financial tool that will guide the organization in the coming year. Not only does it need to be accurate, it needs to be well-considered and realistic.
In our example, the company missed the mark rather dramatically, showing a profit margin 22 percent less than the one projected in the budget. What questions should management ask?
Why is the projected actual so far off from the budgeted amount? Perhaps it was the fault of the budgetingprocess being too optimistic or of a budget based on considerations unrealistic to the current situation. Perhaps there was a significant change in market conditions or materials costs. In any of these scenarios, management needs to understand why before it can accurately assess the new year’s budget.
Production costs for Units A, B, and C do not match their profit scenario. What gives? It may be that the unit production varies and standardization needs to be applied. If a more costly unit is not earning more exponentially, it may mean that (a) the unit is improperly priced, or (b) demand has slacked off and there’s too much inventory left in the warehouse. In either case, management must look at production standards and market demand before budgeting unit-production figures for the new year.
Budget Components – part 3
Posted by admin in budget, effective budgeting, equity, manufacturing, short-term income on July 31st, 2009
A capital budget sets aside funds for capital expenditures. These are primarily new pieces of equipment or facilities, to be used over a period of years. Strategic in nature, a capital budget involves looking at the long-term profit that’s likely to come from investing in that equipment or building.
Many companies allow for flexible budgeting, a process by which budgets are adjusted to match output and/or marketplace factors that influence the company’s revenues and expenses. Companies with a sudden short-term, unbudgeted income opportunity may create a flexible budget that adds to the expense side of the equation, but also adds corresponding revenues from product sales.
Defining Budget Type – part 1
Posted by admin in Companies, Global Markets, budget, expenditures, production cycles on July 30th, 2009
Budgets, like business plans, come in different makes and models depending on the purpose for which a company wants to use them. If its purpose is to plan strategies for the future, the company uses a long-term budget to set general goals for the next five or ten years. If its purpose is to plan the details of its operations, the company prepares a short-term budget, generally for a single year, to translate its goals into financial terms. Whether a budget is long-range or short-range, smart managers will revise them periodically, as conditions change.
The one-year budget is most commonly known as an operational budget, designed to help a company or the departments within that company get through one more year of sales and production cycles with some semblance of financial success. The 12-month time frame does make the budget somewhat strategic in nature, but by and large its purpose is to anticipate and plan for coming issues and trends within the business year.
The Budget: Definition – part 2
Posted by admin in Companies, budget, expenditures, management skills on July 29th, 2009
Although time periods vary, 12 months is the most common
thinking at best. Anything shorter, while useful, may not anticipate all the bumps in the road a business will face.
The budget your family kept when you were young revolved around savings and expenditures, charting the ebb and flow of resources and supplies. When it comes to a company’s budget, things grow a little more complicated, but the
principles are the same. Budgets predict sales and other revenue (income) and production and operating costs (expenses), and the difference between the two (the company’s profit or loss). The budget is the tool for estimating those numbers, and hopefully help managers prevent losses. And, working in tandem or as part of the business plan, it sets goals for either or both.
Budgeting is that simple. And it’s that important.
The Budget: Definition – part 1
Posted by admin in Companies, Investment Opportunities, budget, management skills on July 29th, 2009
Chances are when you were growing up, your family had a budget, it may have included expense categories such as groceries and clothing, a little cash kept in the sugar bowl or a desk drawer, and an envelope of coupons clipped from the newspaper. That was the first experience most of us had with budgets and, in its simplest form, it’s the quintessential definition of budgeting for business.
Like any other strategic direction and business plan, every company requires a financial plan to face the future. The company and departmental budgets are manifestations of that plan, a year-long look at the peaks and valleys of sales and expenses, the projection of cash flow (or lack of same) and the financial direction a company will take over the next 12 months.