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BE3 Summary

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Summary for Business Economics 3 NHL Stenden University of Applied Sciences BA International Tourism Management

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  • 10 januari 2024
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Business Economics 3
CHAPTER 3: FINANCIAL STATEMENT

INVESTMENT & FINANCING

Running a company requires resources

 Fixed Assets: tangible or intangible assets staying in the company > 1 year
 Current Assets: in the company < 1 year; these assets need to be financed somehow  there will be
time between moment of purchase and moments of cash flow; e.g. accounts receivable from
customers that received deliveries but did not pay yet

Financing can be obtained either by using equity or credit

 Equity: capital made available by the owner(s) of the company; equity is available for an unlimited
period of time

Reward for providing equity is the profit generated  owners decide if they want to receive a share of
the profit or retain the earning  additional equity is made available

 Liabilities: capital made available by creditors

Temporary financial resource  prior agreement on repayment is made

BALANCE SHEET & INCOME STATEMENT

Balance sheet is made to compare the value of resources a company invested in (assets) and the financial
resources used to acquire these assets (liabilities)

Balance sheet 31-10-2012

Fixed assets Equity capital

E.g.: Buildings E.g.: Share capital

Computers etc Reserves

Current assets Long term liabilities

E.g.: Debtors E.g.: Mortgage

Inventories Short term liabilities

Cash E.g.: Creditors



Financial structure changes throughout the year through

 Sales
 Purchases
 Loss of value of assets  Depreciation

,PROFIT VERSUS CASH FLOW

Profit can be further analysed by taking a closer look at sales and costs over the period concerned  Income
Statement

 Sales: assigned to the period during which the company delivered and invoiced the goods/services,
regardless of whether the delivery resulted in payment
 Costs: not automatically equal to cash outflows; e.g. depreciation


DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SALES/COSTS AND CASH INFLOWS/OUTFLOWS




There are specific items that create a difference between cash flow and profit:

 Depreciation: investment should not be considered as a cost on the income statement for the entire
amount immediately, but should be spread for the economic lifespan
 Provisions: considered in the event of future obligations;

Costs will be recognized on the income statement before any actual payment has taken place

e.g. Provisions of 20,000€ will be made on the credit side of the balance sheet  equity & profit go
down; Provisions of 20,000€ will be recognized in the income statement  if the 20,000€ will need to
be paid, payment will not result in costs  reduction on cash will be equal to reduction of provision,
equity will not change

 cash flow cannot be manipulated, profit however can be adjusted

 Direct equity transactions: of the owner deposits or withdraws money, these owner deposits/owner
withdrawals have no influence on profit  origin not related to business activities




CHAPTER 4: BUSINESS PLAN

PURPOSE OF THE BUSINESS PLAN


DRAWING UP A BUSINESS PLAN
 Forces the creator to reflect if the ideas are realistic or not
 Provides an overview of all the steps that need to be taken

, A business plan consists of several sub plans, however, in BE3 only the Financial Plan will be discussed

FINANCIAL PLAN

The Financial Plan consist of:

 Investment Plan: overview with all required investments in resources: balance sheet opening
 Financing Plan: How will the investments be financed?
 Income Statement: forecast for the first year: sales estimates
 Cash Flow Overview: forecast cash inflows and outflows
 Balance Sheet: prognosis at the end of the first year (data derived from income statement & cash
Flow)



CHAPTER 6: WORKING CAPITAL MANAGEMENT

Working Capital = current assets

Net working capital = current assets – current liabilities

INVENTORY MANAGEMENT

Presence of inventory results in

 Investments
 Additional costs (financing, storage, insurance, decay,…)

Advantage of excessive inventory:

 Obtaining discounts for bulk purchases
 Saving on transportation costs
 Less dependent on suppliers
 Quick delivery to customers

It is important to find a balance between advantages and costs by choosing the optimum inventory size and
purchasing amounts. Efficient inventory management will lead to lowest sum of carrying costs and ordering
(set up) costs

 Carrying costs: costs of carrying an inventory, depended on number of goods in inventory
 Ordering costs: costs involved in purchasing goods or setting up machines, depended on. Number of
purchasing or production costs
 Economic Order Quantity: At what order size are costs at a minimum?

EOQ=
√ 2∗D∗F
c
D … total purchasing costs

F … ordering costs per order
c … carrying costs per product per period

Suppose Blokker purchases 75,000 lunch boxes per year. The carrying costs are 0.30€ per lunch box per
year. The ordering costs are 5€ per order.


EOQ=
√ 2∗75,000∗5
0.30
= 1,581 lunch boxes  Each time Blokker orders new lunch boxes, it will order

1,581. By doing so, the total or ordering and carrying costs will be at a minimum.

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