Post on 25-Feb-2016
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UCSD LAMP 2014:Financial Success
Dan Goldzband, CMA• University of California, San
Diego, Extension Division• General Dynamics Global Imaging
Systems, San Diego CA * All opinions expressed are the soley the presenter’s and do not represent
the positions or policies of General Dynamics or the University of California.
Dan Goldzband, CMAContact Info
• Email: daniel_goldzband@alumni.cmc.edu
• Cell: 858-229-4880
• LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/dangoldzband
Financial Success Overview: Purpose
General: • Provide a useful understanding of the basis of
accounting and finance and how R&D fits into that schema;
• Enable you to communicate more effectively with your company’s financial managers and staff, for your mutual benefit.
Specific: Provide tools to track and analyze your own LAMP project’s performance.
Financial Success Overview: Presentation Outline
• Underlying concepts: finance vs. accounting• Nature and analysis of costs• Projecting project development cost / Using the
Budget & Costing TemplateExercise: Set up Budget & Costing Template
• Evaluating future project or product financial performanceExercises:• Project your team project’s financial performance• Southwest Airlines landing system
Financial Success Overview: Presentation Outline (part 2)
• Evaluating company financial performanceReview Cohu, Inc. financial statementsSelect companies for more rigorous financial statement analysis at 2nd meeting
• R&D case studies:Assignment: R&D case studies to report at 2nd meetingCase Exercise: Gold Peak Electronics (if time permits)
Company Performance Simulation Exercise
I. Underlying Concepts: Finance vs. Accounting
Finance vs. Accounting(dueling definitions)
• Finance: Science of market valuation
• Financial management: Area of management where decisions are based primarily on considerations of value.
• Accounting: Information system used to collect and organize data and provide information regarding an entity’s financial performance and condition.
Finance vs. Accounting(basic work products)
• Accounting: financial statements and various performance analyses derived from them (historical):
Income statementBalance sheetCash flow statement
• Finance: performance projections and valuations (future-oriented):
Cash flow projectionsNPV / Economic value added analysis
II. Nature and Analysis of Costs
II. Cost Definitions -- Part 1• Cost: The amount of resources surrendered
(or obligations incurred) to acquire or create a new resource.
• Expense: Amount of resources consumed to deliver goods/services to customers, or carry out the company’s major or central operations (i.e. use of either existing assets or new resources)
Note: Costs are recognized as expenses only when the resources they represent are actually consumed. Only then can the costs be matched as expenses against revenues (directly or indirectly) and thus permit calculation of performance (accomplishments – efforts).
Cost Analysis concepts• Cost Object: Anything about which cost data is
collected; the point of reference of cost measurement.• Cost Driver: Any independent factor (variable) that
causes costs to be generated.
Cost Classifications(non-exclusive)
Classification BasisProduct costs vs. period costs Relationship to revenue
generation
Direct vs. indirect Relationship to occurrence of specified activity
Cost behavior: Variable vs. fixed Relationship to volume of activity
Product Costs: accounting treatments according to product
characterTangible product: Product in form of finished goods inventory until actually sold (i.e., reclassified from a cost to an expense)
Examples: Delta Design (Cohu) test handlers, kits and spare parts
GD GIT motors, resolvers and other devices
HP printers
Services: Product in form of service, series of services or other intangible. Cost of providing these services or intangible benefits is expensed as incurred, regardless of how much (or little) revenue results in same period.
Examples: AT&T communication servicesGoogle web-based advertisingSouthwest Airlines transport services
Period CostsDefinition: Costs not related to production activities.
These usually occur as a function of the passage of time, or at least independently of fundamental production or operational activities.
Typical period costs:• Selling costs (advertising, commissions, delivery, support)• General and administrative costs• R&D
Note: What is the fundamental activity of any company?
Product Costs: analysisDefinition: Costs pertaining to the creation, acquisition or
generation of the company’s product or services.
Traditional manufacturing model of product costs:
Raw materials+ Direct labor+ Overhead (includes depreciation*)
= Product cost
* Depreciation of production capital assets
Product vs. Period Costs (standard P&L format)
Direct vs. Indirect CostsTraditionally applies specifically to product costs
Definitions:• Direct costs: Product costs which can be
related or traced to specific, discrete units of production or services.
• Indirect costs: Product costs which cannot be related or traced to specific, discrete units of production or services, or for which it is impractical to do so.
Direct vs. Indirect Costs(with production as cost driver)
Cost Behavior Patterns• Variable costs: Vary in relation (usually
directly) to the volume of a specific activity/cost driver (usually production or sales)
• Fixed costs: Do not vary directly as a function of same activity. (“Fixed” actually a misnomer—theses costs do vary, but are not driven by—are not a function of—production or sales).
Fixed vs. Variable Costs(contribution margin format P&L)
Specific Cost Classifications
Specific Cost Classifications
Product Costing Tools
• Bill of Materials (BOM)• Routing
Costed Bill of Material
Costed Labor Routing(and full cost summary)
Operation Description Hours Cost/Hr. Ext. Cost
10 Assemble 2.50 $25.00 $62.50 20 Test 1.00 45.00 45.00 30 Move to stock 0.25 25.00 6.25
3.75 $113.75
Material cost 2,020.00
Total unit cost $2,133.75
Key Cost Accounting/Mgt Terms• Standard cost: Pre-determined, per-unit cost for a
component of production or service (material, labor or OH). Used in internal control process as benchmark standard.
• Cost variance: Amount of difference between actual and standard cost.
• Target costing: The process of setting product cost goals at or near start of product development process and designing products to meet those cost goals.
III. Projecting Project Development Cost
Evaluating Financial Performance
Project cost evaluation: • Development cost vs budget• Achieving product target cost
Financial contribution evaluation: • NPV• ROI• Payback
Project Development Costs
Materials and Services:• Materials• Purchased services (consulting)Labor (at burdened rates):• R&D• Overhead
LAMP Project Financial Management Tool:
Budget and Costing Template
• Collect and report project development costs by period
• Project 12 months net income and calculate projected Return on Investment
IV. Evaluating Future Project or Product
Financial Performance
Evaluating Product Financial Performance
• Payback• Return on Investment (ROI)• Net Present Value (NPV, aka Economic
Value Added, or EVA)
Project 1: Sample Assumptions
Investment 750,000
P&L / Cash Flow: $ / unit Qty Ext
Revenue 250 10,000 2,500,000 Variable cost 100 10,000 (1,000,000) Contribution Margin 1,500,000 Fixed Costs (excl Depreciation) (1,000,000) Depreciation (150,000) Op Profit 350,000 Tax @ 35% (122,500) Net Income 227,500 Plus: Depreciation (non-cash expense) 150,000 Annual Cash Flow 377,500
5-year economic life, discount rate: 12%
Timing of Product Financial Evaluations
• At project inception
vs
• Upon project completion
Payback
• Criteria: Time required to recover investment
• Calculation:Investment / annual cash flow
• Scenario 1 Payback:750,000 / 377,500 = 2 years
Return on Investment (ROI)
• Criteria: Financial return
• Calculation:Annual cash flow / Investment
• Project 1 ROI:377,500 / 750,000 = 51%
Net Present Value (NPV)• Criteria: Value added from final product.
• Calculation:Sum of present values of cash flows (negative and positive)
• Project 1 Incremental Value:Investment (750,000)PV of Op C/F’s 1,360,803NPV 610,803
Relative Merits• Payback: Critical to capital
management
• ROI: Ease of understanding and applicable to post-investment performance evaluation
• NPV: Directly addresses fundamental issue of shareholder value
Relative DisadvantagesPayback: Disregards time value of money and
actual value created
ROI: Disregards time value of money and actual value created
NPV: Best used as investment decision rule, not well-suited for post-hoc analysis
Project 2: Sample Assumptions
Investment 1,500,000 P&L / Cash Flow:
$ / unit Qty Ext Revenue 275 10,000 2,750,000 Variable cost 100 10,000 (1,000,000) Contribution Margin 1,750,000 Fixed Costs (excl Depreciation) (1,000,000) Depreciation (150,000) Op Profit 600,000 Tax @ 35% (210,000) Net Income 390,000 Plus: Depreciation (non-cash expense) 150,000 Annual Cash Flow 540,000
7-year economic life, discount rate: 12%
Payback (Project 2)
• Criteria: Time required to recover investment
• Calculation:Investment / Annual cash flow
• Scenario 1 Payback:1,500,000 / 540,000 = 2.78 years
Return on Investment (ROI)(Project 2)
• Criteria: Financial return
• Calculation:Annual cash flow / Investment
• Scenario 1 ROI:540,000 / 1,500,000 = 36%
Net Present Value (NPV)(Project 2)
• Criteria: Value added
• Calculation:Sum of present values of cash flows
• Scenario 1 Incremental Value:Investment (1,500,000)PV of Op C/F’s 2,464,429NPV 964,429
Comparison of Methods and Results
Project 1 Project 2Payback 1.99 yrs 2.78
yrs
ROI 50% 36%
NPV 610,803 964,429
Assignment (right now!)
Project your project’s
• ROI
• Payback
(Suggest you add to final report, refining the estimates as necessary)
Group Exercise
• Read WSJ article: “A Radical Cockpit Upgrade Southwest Fliers Will Feel”
• List every conceivable (and plausible) investment, expenditure or operational change that Southwest will have to make to implement and maintain this system (the negative cash flows in an NPV analysis). Also list any non-obvious possible positive cash flows or benefits.
V. Evaluating Company Financial Performance
There are only four things that happen in baseball:
You throw the ball,You hit the ball,You catch the ballAnd you run.
Only Four Things Happen in Finance(with apologies to Bull Durham)
You raise capital (from investors)
You invest capital (in capital assets or product
development)
You return capital (to the investors)
You restructure capital (debt for equity, or vice versa)
Capital Cycle: Presentation in Financial Statements
Source of capital:
Equity / debt investment in venture
Repayment of & return on investment (principle, interest , dividends & stock buy-backs)
Financing
Operations (utilizing capital assets or developed IP)
Investment (in capital assets, or product development for tech/bio ventures)
Positive operating C/F
(we hope!)
Investors
Cash Flow Statement:
Financing Section
Investing Section (CAPEX only)
Income Statement / Profit and Loss (P&L)
Cash Flow Statement:
Operations Section
Basic Financial StatementsProfit and Loss Statement / Income Statement
• Summarizes historic economic/financial performance• Always 3 years comparative statements
Cash Flow Statement • Categorizes and presents all cash flows• Always 3 years comparative statements
Balance Sheet • Summarizes all financial resources and
obligations/ claims against assets to arrive at accounting of enterprise value
• Always 2 years comparative statements
Basic Financial StatementsOwners’ Equity Statement
• Summarizes transactions affecting shareholders’ interest in the company
• Always 3 years comparative statements
Notes to Financial Statements
Basic Financial Statement Analysis: The Four Questions
• What is the trend and quality of recent earnings performance?
• What are the trend and drivers of recent operating cash flow performance?
• How has the company been providing for / investing in its future, and how is it financing this investment?
• Assess the company’s financial condition and its financial strategy.
Financial Performance
Profitability: Ascertain profitability (net income and other interim income measurements) and trend (source: P&L/Income Statement)
Cash Flow: Is the company generating a positive and increasing operating cash flow? (source: Cash Flow Statement, operating section)
Changes in Components of Financial Performance
• Prepare and review P&L vertical analysis for the 3 years to identify trends and changes in performance drivers
• Identify reasons for changes in operating cash flow.
Extent of Investment in the Future
• R&D as % of revenues (source: P&L)• Capital expenditures (Cap X) in new
productive assets and acquistions (source: Cash Flow Stmnt, Investing Section)• Sum of R&D expense and Cap X, as % of
revenues (combined “plowback ratio”)
Revenue (the fundamental company activity) is the standard basis for performance benchmarking
Financial Strategy & ConditionFour financial activities:
1. Raising capital (from investors)
2. Investing capital3. Returning capital (to investors)
4. Restructuring capital (usually to improve overall cost of capital)
#1, 3 and 4 are the “3 R’s” which indicate a company’s overall financial relationship with respect to its investors—what is the net activity over the 3 years represented?
Clues to Financial Strategy & Condition
In C/F statement:• Net financing C/F (positive, negative or
neutral?)• Dividends being paid?• Stock repurchases?• Debt activity (issuances, repayments or both?)
In Balance Sheet:• Change in $ amount of debt or equity• Change in capital structure (debt/equity ratio)
Review of Cohu, Inc. F/S’s
Go to LAMP Holistic Financial Statement Analysis.