Ô³ëîëîã³÷í³ íàóêè
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Î.Â., Ïîçíÿêîâà Î.À.
Ïåðâîìàéñüêèé ôàêóëüòåò
Õàðê³âñüêîãî äåðæàâíîãî óí³âåðñèòåòó õàð÷óâàííÿ ³ òîðã³âë³
FINANCE FUNCTION
Any business - whether large or
small, profit-seeking or not-for-profit - has important financial concerns:
How to get the funds needed to run the business on
favourable terms and how to make sure that
the funds are used effectively?
In this connection modern
businesses have financial managers to look after these problems, whose major
objective is to maximize the value of the firm for its
owners, i.e. to maximize the shareholders' wealth,
which is represented by the market price of a firm's common stock.
Managers daily face
questions like the following:
• What assets to acquire?
• Will a particular investment be profitable?
• Where
will the funds come from to finance the investment?
• How much to maintain as equity capital?
• Does the firm have
adequate cash or access to cash - through bank
borrowing agreements, for example, to meet its daily operating needs?
• Which
customers should be offered credit and how much should they be offered?
• How
much inventory should be held?
• Is
the merger or acquisition advisable?
• How should profits be used or distributed? What is the optimal dividend policy?
• How should the firm behave in the situation of exchange rate variations and
interest rate changes?
• How should risk to which the firm is exposed and return be balanced?
Financial managers are
primarily concerned with the management of fixed
assets, working capital management, including management of
current assets and current liabilities, cash management, receivables management
and inventory management; they are responsible for designing
capital structure, choosing long- and short-term financing techniques.
The financial manager has to
take these decisions with reference to the objectives of the firm.
To have a better understanding of how managers go
about all these concerns one should know
what resources managers typically have at their disposal. The position
of an enterprise, its assets and capital are best illustrated by its financial
statements - the balance sheet and the income statement.
The first major component of the
balance sheet of an enterprise is its assets, which are the resources owned by
the enterprise. The standard classification
of assets divides them into: 1) fixed assets, 2) current assets, 3)
investments and 4) other assets.
Fixed assets are assets
purchased for use in the business on a permanent basis, e.g. land and
buildings, plant and machinery, furniture, motor vehicles, etc.
Current assets are short-term in
nature. They are also known as liquid assets and include cash, marketable securities,
accounts receivable (debtors), notes/bills
receivable and inventory, including finished goods or work in process.
Investments represent investment of funds in the
securities of another company, the purpose of which is either to earn a return
or/and to control another company.
The second major component of
the balance sheet is liabilities of the enterprise, which
represent the amount that the enterprise owes to other enterprises, or the
outside sources which the enterprise uses to finance its assets. They are:
long-term liabilities (obligations payable after the accounting period) -
debentures, bonds, mortgages, secured loans - and current
liabilities (obligations usually repayable within the accounting
period) - accounts payable, bills/notes payable, accrued expenses, deferred income and short-term bank credit.
The third major component of a balance sheet is
the owners' equity-part of the resources of a firm which are supplied by its
owners - shareholders. The owners' equity may consist of two elements: paid-up capital (the initial amount of
funds contributed by the shareholders) and retained earnings (part of the
profits of the shareholders which is
not paid out to them as dividends but ploughed back in the business).
Capital is the store of
accumulated wealth contributed to the firm by its
proprietors - it is the net worth of the business to the owners. Fixed
capital is capital tied up in fixed assets. Working capital is the capital
available for working the business. When an enterprise has bought fixed assets it still needs further capital to buy raw materials,
etc.,
or money to pay wages.
The finance function in a firm
is usually headed by a chief financial officer (CFO), who reports to
the firm's president.
The chief financial officer
distributes the financial management responsibilities between the controller
and the treasure.