Financial management is the business function concerned with profitability, expenses, cash, and credit. These are often grouped together under the rubric of maximizing the value of the firm for stockholders. The discipline is then tasked with the "efficient acquisition and deployment" of both short- and long-term financial resources, to ensure the objectives of the enterprise are achieved.[1]
Financial managers[2] (FM) are specialized professionals directly reporting to senior management, often the financial director (FD); the function is seen as 'staff', and not 'line'.
Role
Financial management is generally concerned with short term working capital management, focusing on current assets and current liabilities, and managing fluctuations in foreign currency and product cycles, often through hedging. The function also entails the efficient and effective day-to-day management of funds, and thus overlaps treasury management. It is also involved with long term strategic financial management, focused on i.a. capital structure management, including capital raising, capital budgeting (capital allocation between business units or products), and dividend policy; these latter, in large corporates, being more the domain of "corporate finance."
Specific tasks:
- Profit maximization happens when marginal cost is equal to marginal revenue. This is the main objective of financial management.
- Maintaining proper cash flow is a short run objective of financial management. It is necessary for operations to pay the day-to-day expenses e.g. raw material, electricity bills, wages, rent etc. A good cash flow ensures the survival of company; see cashflow forecast.
- Minimization on capital cost in financial management can help operations gain more profit.
Relationship with other areas of finance
Two areas of finance directly overlap financial management: (i) Managerial finance is the (academic) branch of finance concerned with the managerial application of financial techniques; (ii) Corporate finance is mainly concerned with the longer term capital budgeting, and typically is more relevant to large corporations.
Investment management, also related, is the professional asset management of various securities (shares, bonds and other securities/assets). In the context of financial management, the function sits with treasury; usually the management of the various short-term financial legal instruments (contractual duties, obligations, or rights) appropriate to the company's cash- and liquidity management requirements. See and Chief Investment Officer.
The term "financial management" refers to a company's financial strategy, while personal finance or financial life management refers to an individual's management strategy. A financial planner, or personal financial planner, is a professional who prepares financial plans.
Financial management systems
Financial management systems are the software and technology used by organizations to connect, store, and report on assets, income, and expenses.[8] These provide the modeling, collaboration and workflow capabilities that spreadsheets cannot sustain at scale. Here, financial managers and CFOs rely on [9] [10] [11] a range of products: traditionally, commercial EPM and BI tools such as BusinessObjects (SAP), OBI EE (
See also
- Financial management for IT services, financial management of IT assets and resources
- Financial Management Service, a bureau of the U.S. Treasury which provides financial services for the government.
- Financial mismanagement
- FP&A
- Managerial finance
Further reading
- Lawrence Gitman and Chad J. Zutter (2019). Principles of Managerial Finance, 14th edition, Addison-Wesley Publishing, ISBN 978-0133507690.
- Clive Marsh (2009). Mastering Financial Management, Financial Times Prentice Hall ISBN 978-0-273-72454-4
- James Van Horne and John Wachowicz (2009). Fundamentals of Financial Management, 13th ed., Pearson Education Limited. ISBN 9705614229
References
- Financial Management Kaplan Financial, retrieved 2023-02-04^
- Financial Managers, Bureau of Labor Statistics^
- Budget Analysts, Bureau of Labor Statistics^