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Management of Finances




                    Notes          to more severe market discipline and a possible loss of competitive advantage. If a firm must
                                   use external funds, the preference is  to use  the following order of financing sources:  debt,
                                   convertible securities, preferred stock and common stock (Myers, 1984). This order reflects the
                                   motivations of the financial manager to retain control of the firm (since only common stock has
                                   a ‘voice’ in management), reduce the agency costs of equity, and avoid the seemingly inevitable
                                   negative market reaction to an announcement of a new equity issue (Hawawini & Viallet, 1999).
                                   Implicit in the pecking order theory are two key assumptions about financial managers. The
                                   first of these is asymmetric information, or the likelihood that a firm’s managers know more
                                   about the company’s current earnings and future growth opportunities than do outside investors.
                                   There is a strong desire to keep such information proprietary. The use of internal funds precludes
                                   managers from having to make public disclosures about the company’s investment opportunities
                                   and potential profits to  be realized  from investing  in them. The second  assumption is  that
                                   managers will act in the best interests of the company’s existing shareholders. The managers
                                   may even forgo a positive-NPV project if it would require the issue of new equity, since this
                                   would give much of the project’s value to new shareholders at the expense of the old (Myers &
                                   Majluf, 1984).

                                   8.10.1 Capital Market Treatment of New Security Issues

                                   The two assumptions noted above help to explain some of the observed behaviour of financial
                                   managers. More insight is gained by looking at how the capital markets treat the announcement
                                   of new security issues. Announcements of new debt generally are treated as a positive signal
                                   that  the issuing  firm  feels  strongly  about  its  ability  to  service  the  debt  into  the  future.
                                   Announcements of new common stock are generally treated as a negative signal that the firm’s
                                   managers feel the company’s stock is overvalued (i.e. earnings are likely to decline in the future)
                                   and they wish to take advantage of a market opportunity. So it is easy to see why financial
                                   managers use  new common stock  as  a last  resort in  capital structure  decisions. The  mere
                                   announcement of a new stock issue will cause the price of the firm’s stock to fall as the market
                                   participants try to sort out the implications of the firm choosing to issue a new equity issue.
                                   8.10.2 How Pecking Order is Superior to the Trade-off Model


                                   While the trade-off model implies a static approach to financing decisions based upon a target
                                   capital structure, the pecking order theory allows for the dynamics of the firm to dictate an
                                   optimal capital structure for a given firm at any particular point in time (Copeland & Weston,
                                   1988). A firm’s capital structure is a function of its internal cash flows and the amount of positive-
                                   NPV investment opportunities available. A firm that has been very profitable in an industry
                                   with relatively slow growth (i.e. few investment opportunities) will have no incentive to issue
                                   debt and will likely have a low debt-to-equity ratio. A less profitable firm in the same industry
                                   will likely have a high debt-to-equity ratio. The more profitable a firm, the more financial slack
                                   it can build up.

                                   Financial slack is defined as a firm’s highly liquid assets (cash and marketable securities) plus
                                   any unused debt capacity (Moyer, McGuigan, and Kretlow, 2001). Firms with sufficient financial
                                   slack will be able to fund most, if not all, of their investment opportunities internally and will
                                   not have to issue debt or equity securities. Not having to issue new securities allows the firm to
                                   avoid both the flotation costs associated with external funding and the monitoring and market
                                   discipline that occurs when accessing capital markets.
                                   Prudent financial managers will attempt to maintain financial flexibility while ensuring the
                                   long-term survivability of their firms. When profitable firms retain their earnings as equity and
                                   build  up cash reserves, they create the financial slack  that allows financial flexibility  and,
                                   ultimately long-term survival.




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