CHAPTER 1 FM
CHAPTER 1 FM
CHAPTER 1 FM
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
CHAPTER 1:
Prepared by:
MISS WAN SHAHZLINDA SHAH BINTI SHAHAR & MISS WAN SURAYA WAN HASSIN
FACULTY OF MANAGEMENT & MUAMALAH
1.0 overview
How can firm best manage its cash flow as they arise in its
day-to-day operation?
Working capital management: management of firms
current asset and short term financing
FINANCE AREAS IN A FIRM
1.3 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FINANCE,
ACCOUNTING & ECONOMIC
FINANCE
Concern on the
management of firms
fund
ECONOMIC ACCOUNTING
Give an overview on the Have an effect on the
factors affecting the accounting data
environment which will presented by an
then acountant
1.4 BROAD AREAS OF FINANCE
SOLE
PARTNERSHIP ORGANIZATION
PROPRIETORSHIP
Unincorporated business own by an
individual Between two or more parties
Advantages: Lower income taxes, Advantages: easy and inexpensively to
simple regulation, easy and inexpensive form, Income based on PSR and CCR,
to form. Tax on individual basis avoid corporate
Disadvantages: unlimited liabilities, taxes.
life of business is limited, difficult to get Disadvantages: unlimited liabilities.
large capital.
Sole
Partnership
Proprietorship
Company
Legal entity
Advantages: limited liability
, Easy to get large capital
through shareholder
Disadvantage: Double
taxation
1.6 OVERVIEW OF ISLAMIC FINANCE
Islamic banking refers to a system of banking that complies with Islamic law also known as Shariah
law. The underlying principles that govern Islamic banking are mutual risk and profit sharing
between parties, the assurance of fairness for all.
Islamic finance has grown tremendously since it first emerged in the 1970's. There are over 300
Islamic financial institutions worldwide across 75 countries and Malaysia's Islamic finance industry
has been in existence for over 30 years with the country's first Islamic Bank to be established and
thereafter, with the liberalisation of the Islamic financial system.
Malaysia's long track record of building a successful domestic Islamic financial industry of over 30
years gives the country a solid foundation - financial bedrock of stability that adds to the richness,
diversity and maturity of the financial system.
1.6.1 THE OBJECTIVES OF ISLAMIC
FINANCE
Other factors :
contributing to the social welfare of the community,
promoting sustainable development projects
alleviating poverty
1.6.2 BASIC PROHIBITION IN ISLAMIC FINANCE
Prohibition of Riba
Prohibition of Gharar
Prohibition of Maysir
1.6.3 PROHIBITION BASED ON BUSINESS ETHICS
AND ON NORMS
Financial System
ISLAMIC CONVENTIONAL
FINANCIAL FINANCIAL
SYSTEM SYSTEM
FINANCIAL FINANCIAL
INSTITUTION (IFI) MARKET
1.6.5 MAIN COMPONENT IN FINANCIAL MARKET
Money
Market
Secondary Capital
Market Market
Primary
Market
MONEY MARKET vs
CAPITAL MARKETS
Money Capital
Short-Term, < 1 Year Long-Term, >1Yr
Secondary
Primary Market
Market
Debt
Equity
PRIMARY MARKET vs
SECONDARY MARKETS
PRIMARY SECONDARY
RISK MANAGEMENT
Identifying the risk that should be managed efficiently
1.9 RISK & RETURN RELATIONSHIP
Risk = the chance that some unfavorable event will occur
Return = the gain or loss of a security in a particular period.
Positive relationship:
High risk, high return
Low risk, low return
RETURN
RISK FREE
RISK
RISK FROM ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE
AL GHUNM BIL GHURM ???
In one of his sayings, the Prophet asserted that entitlement to the
return on an asset relates to the risk of ownership
Based on this hadith, Muslim jurists developed a legal maxim al-
ghurm bi al-ghunm or gain is justified with risk.
Indirectly, it also entails that in the absence of risk in business it
might give rise to interest-based transactions, which is strictly
prohibited in Islam (Quran, 2:275-279).
Nowadays, the notion of no risk, no gain is widely applied by
Islamic finance and banking institutions through the concepts
of mudarabah and musyarakah.
Al-ghunm bil ghurm is similar to the notion of risk-return tradeoff in
conventional.
To acquire knowledge, one must study;
but to acquire wisdom, one must observe.