Assignment For Advanced Financial Management
Assignment For Advanced Financial Management
COMMERCE
INTERNAL EXAM – SEMESTER IV
SUBJECT: ADVANCED FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
NAME: FLEMIN GEORGE
ROLL NO.: 24
1. Explain various sources of Finance in detail?
Ans. There are three types of sources of fund i.e. Long term sources of finance, Medium
term of finance and short term sources of finance.
Long-term financing means capital requirements for a period of more than 5 years to
20 years or maybe more depending on other factors. Capital expenditures in fixed assets
like plant and machinery, land and building, etc of business are funded using long-term
sources of finance. Part of working capital which permanently stays with the business is
also financed with long-term sources of funds. Long-term financing sources can be in the
form of any of them: Share Capital, Preference Capital, Debenture or bonds, etc.
Medium term financing means financing for a period of 3 to 5 years and is used
generally for two reasons. One, when long-term capital is not available for the time being
and second when deferred revenue expenditures like advertisements are made which are
to be written off over a period of 3 to 5 years. Medium term financing sources can in the
form of one of them: Medium term loans from financial institution, Government Bonds,
Lease Finance and Hire Purchase Finance.
Short term financing means financing for a period of less than 1 year. The need for
short-term finance arises to finance the current assets of a business like an inventory of
raw material and finished goods, debtors, minimum cash and bank balance etc. Short-
term financing is also named as working capital financing. Short term finances are
available in the form of: Short term loan from commercial banks, Advances from
customers, Bill Discounting and Payables.
2. Explain classification of Capital budgeting techniques?
Ans. Some of the major techniques used in capital budgeting are as follows: Payback
period, Accounting Rate of Return method, Net present value method, Internal Rate of Return
Method, Profitability index.
A. Payback period:
The payback (or payout) period is one of the most popular and widely recognized
traditional methods of evaluating investment proposals, it is defined as the number of
years required to recover the original cash outlay invested in a project, if the project
generates constant annual cash inflows, the payback period can be computed dividing
cash outlay by the annual cash inflow.
E. Profitability index:
It is the ratio of the present value of future cash benefits, at the required rate of return
to the initial cash outflow of the investment. It may be gross or net, net being simply
gross minus one.
A. Raw materials:
They are any items used to manufacture components or finished products. These can
be items produced directly by your business or purchased from a supplier. For
example, a candle-making business could purchase raw materials such as wax, wicks,
and decorative ribbons.
B. Works-in-process:
It refers to unfinished items moving through production but not yet ready for sale. In
the case of a candle-making business, work-in-progress inventory might be candles
that are drying and unpackaged.
D. Finished goods:
This goods are products that have completed the production process and are ready to
be sold: the candles themselves.