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Principles of Finance Videos 166 videos

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Company Formation, Structure, Inception
96 Views

How is a company... born? Can it be performed via C-section? Is there a midwife present? Do its parents get in a fight over what to name it? In thi...

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Intro: Company Formation, Structure, and Inception: Unit Intro
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Company Formation, Structure, and Inception: Unit Intro. Sorry, Leo DiCaprio fans—we're not going to be breaking down the plot of Inception. We'r...

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Alex, That’s Finance Potpourri for $500
67 Views

Okay, so you want to be a company financial manager. It's basically up to you to make money for the shareholders. It would also be swell if you mad...

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Principles of Finance: Unit 3, Depreciation vs. Amortization 25 Views


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Description:

Depreciation is the decline in value of an asset over time, while amortization is the process of assigning costs or revenues over time. Appreciation is... what you feel for Shmoop.

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Transcript

00:00

principles of finance. a la shmoop. depreciation versus amortization. ok

00:08

people two words. depreciation and amortization. sing it with me. [definitions]

00:13

alright well they're kissing cousins and both reflect the

00:17

same notion. things wear out -like my vocal cords .they must be replaced. not my

00:23

vocal cords. thank you alright key idea here people. depreciation is for tangible

00:28

things- i.e. things you can touch. like a tractor smelting factory. yeah things

00:33

gonna wear out. amortization is for intangible things like patents and

00:38

contracted for distribution relationships and FCC licenses. and here

00:44

we're gonna talk about a broadcast license- which is intangible right? or

00:49

amortize away its value. okay the big question that unites them is when and

00:54

well really at what rate right when are we gonna execute these things. well

00:57

there's a little story to help illustrate. and we're rounding dates and

01:01

times to keep the math as easily digestible as possible. in the 1980s cap

01:11

cities owned what is today the ABC television network now owned by Disney. [abc logo]

01:17

in those days the law was such that the FCC would grant broadcast licenses for

01:23

periods of time .a network would apply to renew that license, and as long as they

01:29

quote did right unquote by the public, ie

01:32

broadcast hurricane warnings aggressively air public service messages,

01:37

against drunk driving and sponsored charitable picnics with mucky-mucks, well

01:41

then their licenses generally got renewed. the law changed a few times

01:45

along the way allowing for ownership concentration to increase, and that is [judge bangs gavel]

01:49

they allowed one station to buy another. since a given target acquisitions

01:54

broadcast license was a huge part of their total value in an acquisition well

01:59

that licenses remaining duration had to be amortized away. well you can imagine

02:04

that in a portfolio of a dozen station acquisitions there ended up being a ton

02:10

of broadcast license amortization fact that had to be

02:14

amortized away. while some stations had only two years left on their license so

02:19

they were a small line item in the acquisition others had like 17 years [broadcast license pictured]

02:23

left and others had a dozen or more. all

02:26

right well the result cap cities had a lot of

02:28

quote false unquote expenses. that is in a given quarter if they had a hundred

02:33

million dollars of revenue and fifty million dollars of expenses that were in

02:36

cash they'd have booked attribution of another forty million dollars of

02:40

amortization of quote costs unquote that had to be run through the income

02:45

statement meaning those costs were amortizing down the license. so instead of showing

02:49

that they actually earned a dollar seventy a share in cash, while their real

02:55

income statement earnings showed like only a dime in earnings. and Wall Street [cap cities income statement shown]

02:59

hated this. the street had just come off a terrible bear market in the 70s and

03:04

investors were in no mood to pay much more than 15 times real earnings for a

03:09

stock no matter what the earnings quality looked like. well cap city's

03:13

thought this was just lunacy because on a free cash flow basis while they traded

03:18

at about six times cash earnings. and that's for ABC, which was at the time

03:23

one of the premier media properties in the entire free world. and maybe the

03:27

unfree world we're not sure what licenses go for in China. so the company

03:31

was the first to really buy back its own stock. basically giving the middle finger

03:36

to Wall Street. and oh by the way there was one investor who totally got the [middle finger shown to wall street stock traders]

03:41

stupidity of the accounting rules behind cap cities you've probably heard of him

03:45

yeah he became their largest shareholder.

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