Similarities Between Financial and Management Accounting

Financial accounting and management accounting play an important part in accounting information system. They co-exist in enterprise production and operation of management, constituting the modern enterprise accounting system together. Much information which management accounting required is from financial accounting, while financial accounting also put the established budget, standards organizations, and such daily accounting data from management accounting as the basic premise. Financial accounting focuses on external services, but internal services is also included. Information which financial accounting provided on the funding, costs, profits and other information is very important for business management. In particular, financial statements can comprehensive and reflect all aspects of enterprise’s financial position and operating results. Study of the financial statements can grasp the overall situation of the enterprises, managers must first be aware of the overall situation, so that guide enterprises to continuously move forward. Therefore, managers must pay close attention, and be very concerned about Continue reading

8 Risks Faced by Modern Banks at the Present Competitive Business World

The unanticipated part of the return, that portion resulting from surprises is the true risk of any investment. If we always receive what we expect, than the investment is perfectly predictable and, by definition, risk-free. In other words, the risk of owning an asset comes from surprises-unanticipated events. RISK is a concept that denotes the precise probability of specific eventualities. It is simply the future uncertainty and not only the incidents of predictable outcomes but also the unpredictable favorable outcomes. All the firms or companies whether it is in real or providing service are facing some sort of risk at present competitive business world to run its business. Banks are one of them in these regard and it is facing possibility of risk in terms of money and their achieved reputation. Bank is a financial institution that primarily deals with borrowing and lending money from the people by the people Continue reading

What is Trading on Equity?

The phrase trading on equity is a financial jargon which indicates the utilization of non-equity sources of funds in the capital structure of an enterprise. At a high debt-equity ratio, a firm may not be able to borrow funds at a cheaper rate of interest it may not able to borrow funds at all. This is so because creditors lose confidence in the company which has a high debt-equity ratio. How can creditors have confidence in the company which has only creditors and no equity stockholders? The company will, therefore, have to strive hard to regain a reasonable debt-equity ratio so that the expectations of the market may be satisfied. In fact, equity financing by way of a public sale of stock offers real value of a firm. Traditionally, it has served as a spearhead for expansion of resources and productive capacity involving risk. Merwin Waterman states that the term Continue reading

What is a Master Budget?

Budget provides comprehensive financial overview of planned company operation. A company’s objectives budget is the overall financial plan showing expenditure of the available funds. A company’s budget is driven by the aims and objectives of the company as well as what it can actually accomplish. Many variables in a business can be budgeted which includes sales, output, cost- (variable and fixed), profits, cash flow, capital investment. Budget should be SMART, that is specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and with time bound otherwise budget will be ineffective. Strategic objective of the company is the first factor that needs to be considered when formulating budgets because unaligned budget with strategic objective lead to failure. The next step of budgeting is identifying the limiting factor that the organization is faced with which is known as constraint which may be a limit on the number of goods a business could sell (demand is limiting factor) Continue reading

Appropriate Capital Structure

An Appropriate Capital Structure  is that capital structure at that level of debt — equity proportion where the market value per share is maximum and the cost of capital is minimum.  It is important for a company to have an appropriate capital structure. Features of an Appropriate Capital Structure Return- The capital structure of the company should be most advantageous subject to other considerations it should generate maximum returns to the shareholders without adding cost to them. Risk- The use of excessive debt threatens the solvency of the company. To the point debt does not add significant risk it should be used otherwise its use should be avoided. Flexibility- The capital structure should be possible for a company to adapt its capital structure with a minimum cost and delay if warranted by a changed situation. It should also be possible for the company to provide funds whenever needed to finance Continue reading

Capital Structure and Risk-Return Tradeoff

The capital structure of a firm should be designed in such a way that it keeps the total risk of the firm to the minimum level. The financial or capital structure decision of a firm to use a certain proportion of debt or otherwise in the capital mix involves two types of risks: Financial Risk: The financial risk arise on account of the use of debt or fixed interest bearing securities in its capital. A company with no debt financing has no financial risk. The extent of financial risk depends on the leverage of the firm’s capital structure. A firm using debt in it capital has to pay fixed interest charges and the lack of ability to pay fixed interest increases the risk of liquidation. The financial risk also implies the variability of earning available to equity shareholders. Non-Employment of Debt Capital (NEDC) Risk: If a firm does not use Continue reading