Financial Management

Financial management may be defined as the area or function in an organization which is concerned with profitability, expenses, cash and credit, so that the "organization may have the means to carry out its objective as satisfactorily as possible;" [1] the latter often defined as maximizing the value of the firm for stockholders. 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'.

Nkangala Skills Centre

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 (see Corporate finance § Financial risk management). 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 maximisation 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.

Minimisation on capital cost in financial management can help operations gain more profit.

Estimating the Requirement of Funds: Businesses make forecast on funds needed in both short run and long run, hence, they can improve the efficiency of funding. The estimation is based on the budget e.g. sales budget, production budget; see Budget analyst.

Determining the Capital Structure: Capital structure is how a firm finances its overall operations and growth by using different sources of funds.[4] Once the requirement of funds has estimated, the financial manager should decide the mix of debt and equity and also types of debt.

Our clients/partners

We believe in creating a better future for South Africa through education and the development of skilled workers. We try our best to make education as accessible as possible. To the end user this means we offer more opportunities, at a competitive cost on more platforms than ever before.

ENROLL TODAY
ADMISSION NOW OPEN

At Nkangala Skills Centre ,we have competitive portfolio of education and training courses which includes engineering courses, business studies, short courses and MICT SETA.

Address

No1 Eskombe and Mandela Witbank Emalahleni

Email

registration@nkangalaskillscentre.co.za

Phone

0135916088