2. Learning Objectives
1. Understand the goals of financial planning.
2. Use the percent of sales method to forecast the
financing requirements of a firm including its
discretionary financing needs.
3. Prepare a cash budget and use it to evaluate the
amount and timing of a firm’s short-term
financing requirements.
3. An Overview of Financial Planning
What is the primary objective of preparing financial
plans?
To estimate the future financing requirements in advance of
when the financing will be needed.
The process of planning is critical to force
managers to think systematically about the future,
despite the uncertainty of future.
4. An Overview of Financial Planning (cont.)
Most firms engage in three types of planning:
Strategic planning,
Long-term financial planning, and
Short-term financial planning
Strategic plan defines, in very general terms, how
the firm plans to make money in the future. It
serves as a guide for all other plans.
5. An Overview of Financial Planning (cont.)
The long-term financial plan generally
encompasses a period of three to five years and
incorporates estimates of the firm’s income
statements and balance sheets for each year of the
planning horizon.
6. An Overview of Financial Planning (cont.)
The short-term financial plan spans a period of
one year or less and is a very detailed description of
the firm’s anticipated cash flows.
The format typically used is a cash budget, which
contains detailed revenue projections and expenses
in the month in which they are expected to occur
for each operating unit of the company.
7. Developing a Long-Term Financial Plan
Forecasting a firm’s future financing needs using a
long-term financial plan can be thought of in
terms of three basic steps:
1. Construct a sales forecast
2. Prepare pro-forma financial statements
3. Estimate the firm’s financing needs
8. Developing a Long-Term Financial Plan (cont.)
Step 1: Construct a Sales Forecast
Sales forecast is generally based on:
1. past trend in sales; and
2. the influence of any anticipated events that might
materially affect that trend.
9. Developing a Long-Term Financial Plan (cont.)
Step 2: Prepare Pro Forma Financial Statements
Pro forma financial statements help forecast a firm’s asset
requirements needed to support the forecast of revenues
(step 1).
The most common technique is percent of sales method
that expresses expenses, assets, and liabilities for a future
period as a percentage of sales.
10. Developing a Long-Term Financial Plan (cont.)
Step 3: Estimate the Firm’s Financing Needs
Using the pro forma statements we can extract the cash flow
requirements of the firm.
11. Financial Forecasting Example
Step 1: Forecast Revenues and Expenses
Zeigen’s financial analyst estimate the firm will earn 5% on
the projected sales of $12 million in 2010.
Zeigen plans to retain half of its earnings and distribute the
other half as dividends.
13. Financial Forecasting Example (cont.)
Step 2: Prepare Pro Forma Financial Statements
The firm’s need for assets to support firm sales is forecasted
using percent of sales method, where each item in the
balance sheet is assumed to vary in accordance with its
percent of sales for 2010.
14. Financial Forecasting Example (cont.)
Step 3: Estimate the Firm’s Financing
Requirements
This involves comparing the projected level of assets needed
to support the sales forecast to the available sources of
financing.
In essence, we now forecast the liabilities and owner’s equity
section of the pro forma balance sheet.
15. Sources of Spontaneous Financing – Accounts
Payable and Accrued Expenses
Accounts payable and accrued expenses are
typically the only liabilities that vary directly with
sales.
Accounts payable and accrued expenses are
referred to as sources of spontaneous financing.
The percent of sales method can be used to forecast
the levels of both these sources of financing.
16. Sources of Discretionary Financing
Raising financing with notes payable, long-term
debt and common stock requires managerial
discretion and hence these sources of financing are
called discretionary sources of financing.
The retention of earnings is also a discretionary
source as it is the result of firm’s discretionary
dividend policy.
17. Summarizing Ziegen’s Financial Forecast
Discretionary Financing Needs (DFN)
= {Total Financing Needs} less {Projected Sources of
Financing}
= {$7.2 m (increase in assets)} – {$2.4m in spontaneous
financing + $2.5m in short and long-term debt + $1.8 million
in equity}
= $7.2 million - $6.7 million = $500,000
18. Summarizing Ziegen’s Financial Forecast (cont.)
The firm has to raise $500,000 with some
combination of borrowing (short-term or long-
term) or the issuance of stock.
Since they require a managerial decision, they are
referred to as the firm’s discretionary financing
needs (DFN).
20. Analyzing the Effects of Profitability and Dividend
Policy on the Firm’s DFN
After projecting DFN, we can easily evaluate the
sensitivity of DFN to changes in key variables.
The table (on next slide) shows that as dividend
payout ratios and net profit margin vary, DFN also
changes significantly from a negative $40,000 to
$764,000.
21. Analyzing the Effects of Profitability and Dividend Policy on
the Firm’s DFN (cont.)
DFN for Various Net Profit Margins and
Dividend Payout Ratio (DPR)
Net Profit DPR =30% DPR=50% DPR=70%
Margin
1% $716,000 $740,000 $764,000
5% $380,000 $500,000 $620,000
10% $(40,000) $200,000 $440,000
22. Analyzing the Effects of Sales Growth on a Firm’s
DFN
Consider the impact of sales growth rates of 0%,
20% and 40% on DFN.
It is observed that DFN ranges from ($250,000) at
0% growth rate to $1,250,000 at 40% growth rate.
A negative DFN indicates that the firm has surplus
dollars in financing.
23.
24.
25. Estimating Discretionary Financing Needs
The Pendleton Chemical Company manufactures a line of personal health
care products used in preventing the spread of infectious diseases. The
company’s principal product is a germ-killing hand sanitizer called
“Bacteria-X”. In 2010, Pendleton had $5 million in sales, and anticipates
an increase of 15% in 2011. After performing an analysis of the firm’s
balance sheet, the firm’s financial manager prepared the following pro
forma income statement and balance sheet for next year:
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31. Check Yourself
• Pendleton’s management estimates that
under the most optimistic circumstances it
might experience a 40% rate of growth of
sales in 2011. Assuming that net income
is 5% of firm sales and that both current
and fixed assets are equal to a fixed
percent of sales (as found in the above
forecast), what do you estimate the firm’s
DFN to be under these optimistic
circumstances?
32. Step 1: Picture the Problem
The firm’s DFN is equal to the financing the firm
requires for the year that is not provided by
spontaneous sources such as accounts payable and
accrued expenses plus retained earnings for the
period.
33. Step 2: Decide on a Solution Strategy
We can calculate the DFN using the following
equation:
34. Line Performa Income Statement for 2011
Step 3: Solve
1
2
Growth Rate
Sales
40%
$7,000,000.00
3 Net Income
Performa Balance Sheet for 2011
Multiple Computation
4 Current Assets 0.20 $1,400,000.00
5 Net Fixed Assets 0.6 $4,200,000.00
6 Total 4+5 $5,600,000.00
7 Accounts Payable 0.2 $1,150,000.00
8 Accrued Expenses 0.1 $575,000.00
9 Notes Payable $500,000.00
10 Current Liabilities 7+8+9 $2,225,000.00
11 Long-term Debt $1,000,000.00
12 Common Stock (par) $100,000.00
13 Paid-in-capital $200,000.00
14 Retained Earnings $1,050,000.00
15 Common Equity 12+13+14 $1,350,000.00
$987,500 + Line3 - $287,500
35. Step 4: Analyze
If the firm experiences a 40% growth rate in sales,
Pendleton can expect to raise $1,025,000 during
the coming year.
36. Developing a Short-Term Financial Plan
Unlike a long-term financial plan that is prepared
using pro forma income statements and balance
sheets, short-term financial plan is typically
presented in the form of a cash budget that
contains details concerning the firm’s cash receipts
and disbursements.
37. Developing a Short-Term Financial Plan (cont.)
Cash budget includes the following main elements:
Cash receipts,
Cash disbursements,
Net change in cash, and
New financing needed.
38.
39. Uses of the Cash Budget
1. It is a useful tool for predicting the amount and
timing of the firm’s future financing
requirements.
2. It is a useful tool to monitor and control the firm’s
operations.
40. Uses of the Cash Budget (cont.)
The actual cash receipts and disbursements can be
compared to budgeted estimates, bringing to light
any significant differences.
In some cases, the differences may be caused by
cost overruns or poor collection from credit
customers. Remedial action can then be taken.