2. 12â2
1. Describe how the nature of a firm affects its financing sources.
2. Evaluate the choice between debt financing and equity financing.
3. Identify typical sources of financing used at the outset of a new venture.
4. Discuss the basic process for acquiring and structuring a bank loan.
5. Explain how business relationships can be used to finance a small firm.
6. Describe the two types of private equity investors that offer financing to
small firms.
7. Distinguish among the different government loan programs available to
small companies.
8. Explain when large companies and public stock offerings can be
sources of financing.
Looking Ahead
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
3. 12â3
Basic Types of Financing
Sources of
Financing
Spontaneous
Financing
Profit
Retention
External
Financing
4. 12â4
The Nature of a Firm and
Its Financing Sources
Firmâs
economic
potential
Owner
preferences
for debt or
equity
Company
size and
maturity
Factors That Determine
Financing
Types of
assets
5. 12â5
Debt or Equity Financing?
Tradeoffs
Between Debt
and Equity
Potential
Profitability
Voting
Control
Financial
Risk
7. 12â7
Debt or Equity Financing? (contâd)
⢠Return on Assets
ď Rate of return earned on a
firmâs total assets invested
ď Computed as operating
income á total assets
⢠Return on Equity
ď Rate of return earned on the
ownerâs equity investment
ď Computed as net income á
ownerâs equity investment
14. 12â14
Understanding a Bankerâs Perspective
⢠Bankersâ Concerns
ď How much the bank will earn on the loan?
ď What is the likelihood that the lender will be able to
repay the loan?
⢠The Five Câs of Credit
ď Character of the borrower
ď Capacity of the borrower to repay the loan
ď Capital invested in the venture by the borrower
ď Conditions of the industry and economy
ď Collateral available to secure the loan
15. 12â15
Questions Lenders Ask
⢠Lenderâs Questions:
1. Do the purpose and amount of the loan make sense, both for
the bank and for the borrower?
2. Does the borrower have strong character and reasonable
ability?
3. Does the loan have a certain primary source of repayment?
4. Does the loan have a certain secondary source of repayment?
5. Can the loan be priced profitably to the customer and to the
bank, and are this loan and the relationship good for both the
customer and the bank?
6. Can the loan be properly structured and documented?
16. 12â16
The Bankerâs Concerns
How much
money is
needed?
What is the venture
going to do with the
money?
When and
how will the
money be
paid back?
When will
the money
be
needed?
17. 12â17
Financial Information Required
for a Bank Loan
⢠Three years of the firmâs historical statements
ď Balance sheets, income statements, and statements
of cash flow
⢠The firmâs pro forma financial statements
ď The timing and amounts of the debt repayment
included as part of the forecasts
⢠Personal financial statements
ď The borrowerâs personal net worth (assets â debts)
and estimated annual income
19. 12â19
Negotiating a Loan: Interest Rate
⢠Prime Rate
ď Interest rate charged by a commercial bank on loans
to its most creditworthy customers
⢠LIBOR (London InterBank Offered Rate)
ď Interest rate charged by London banks on loans to
other London banks
⢠Fixed Interest Rates
ď Interest rate remains the same for the term of the loan
⢠Floating Interest Rates
ď Interest rate varies with the changes in the prime rate
20. 12â20
Negotiating a Loan: Term of the Loan
⢠Loan Maturity Date
ď Maturity date matched to use of funds
⢠Repayment Schedule
ď Equal monthly or annual payments
ď Decreasing monthly or annual payments
⢠Loan Covenants
ď Bank-imposed restrictions on a borrower
ďś Financial statements
ďś Loan use restrictions and salary limits
ďś Equity requirements
ďś Personal guarantees by borrower
21. 12â21
Business Suppliers and
Asset-Based Lenders
⢠Accounts Payable (Trade Credit)
ď Supplier-provided financing of inventory to a
company, which sets up an account payable for the
amount.
ďś Short-duration financing (30 days)
ďś Amount of credit available
depends on type of firm
and supplierâs willingness
to extend credit
22. 12â22
Business Suppliers and
Asset-Based Lenders (contâd)
⢠Equipment Loan and Leases
ď Installment loan (mortgage on equipment) from the
seller of machinery purchased by a business.
ď Equipment leased from a supplier:
ďś Frees up cash for other purposes
ďś Leaves lines of credit open
ďś Provides a hedge against
obsolescence
23. 12â23
Business Suppliers and
Asset-Based Lenders (contâd)
⢠Asset-Based Lending
ď A line of credit secured by working-capital assets
ď Factoring
ďś Obtaining cash by selling accounts receivable to factor at
discount to invoice value.
ďś Factor can refuse questionable accounts.
ďś Factor charges fees for servicing accounts and for amount
advanced to firm prior to collection.
ď Purchase-order financing
ďś Lender advances the amount of the borrowerâs cost of goods
sold for a specific customer order.
24. 12â24
Private Equity Investors
⢠Business Angels
ď Private individuals who invest in othersâ
entrepreneurial ventures.
⢠Informal Venture Capital
ď Funds provided by wealthy private individuals
(business angels) to high-risk ventures
⢠Formal Venture Capitalists
ď Form limited partnerships for the purpose of raising
venture capital from large institutional investors
ďś The firmâs expected profits in future years
ďś The venture capitalistâs required rate of return.
25. 12â25
The Government
⢠Small Business Administration (SBA) loans
ď The 7 (a) Guaranty Loan Program
ďś SBA guarantees repayment of loan to lender
ď The Certified Development Company (CDC) 504
Loan Program
ď The 7(m) Microloan Program
ď Small Business Investment Companies (SBICs)
ď Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR)
26. 12â26
The Government (contâd)
⢠State and Local Government Assistance
ď Loan guarantees help lower down payment.
ď Focus on enhancing specific industries or facilitating
certain community goals.
⢠Community-Based Financial Institutions
ď Lenders that provide financing to small businesses in
low-income communities for the purpose of
encouraging economic development.
27. 12â27
Where Else to Look
⢠Large Corporations
ď Provide financing and technical assistance to critical
suppliers and technology developers
⢠Stock Sales
ď Private placement
ďś The sale of a firmâs capital stock
to selected individuals
ď Initial public offering (IPO)
ďś The issuance of stock that is to be
traded in public financial markets
ďś Places firm under SEC securities regulations
28. 12â28
Key Terms
⢠return on assets
⢠return on equity
⢠line of credit
⢠revolving credit agreement
⢠term loan
⢠chattel mortgage
⢠real estate mortgage
⢠prime rate
⢠LIBOR (London InterBank
Offered Rate)
⢠balloon payment
⢠loan covenants
⢠limited liability
⢠accounts payable (trade credit)
⢠equipment loan
⢠asset-based loan
⢠factoring
⢠purchase-order financing
⢠informal venture capital
⢠business angels
⢠informal venture capitalists
⢠formal venture capitalists
⢠7(a) Loan Guaranty Program
⢠Certified Development Company
(CDC) 504 Loan Program
⢠7(m) Microloan Program
⢠small business investment
companies (SBICs)
⢠Small Business Innovative
Research (SBIR) Program
⢠community-based financial
institution
⢠private placement
⢠initial public offering (IPO)