Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, Global Edition

Höfundur Jonathan Berk; Peter DeMarzo; Jarrad Harford

Útgefandi Pearson International Content

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781292437156

Útgáfa 5

Höfundarréttur 2022

4.890 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Brief Contents
  • Detailed Contents
  • About the Authors
  • Bridging Theory and Practice
  • Applications That Reflect Real Practice
  • Teaching Every Student to Think Finance
  • Practice Finance to Learn Finance
  • Preface
  • Part 1: Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Corporate Finance and the Financial Manager
  • 1.1 Why Study Finance?
  • 1.2 The Four Types of Firms
  • Sole Proprietorships
  • Partnerships
  • Limited Liability Companies
  • Corporations
  • Tax Implications for Corporate Entities
  • Corporate Taxation Around the World
  • 1.3 The Financial Manager
  • Making Investment Decisions
  • Global Financial Crisis The Dodd-Frank Act
  • Making Financing Decisions
  • Managing Short-Term Cash Needs
  • The Goal of the Financial Manager
  • Shareholder Value Versus Stakeholder Value
  • 1.4 The Financial Manager’s Place in the Corporation
  • The Corporate Management Team
  • Ethics and Incentives in Corporations
  • Global Financial Crisis The Dodd-Frank Act on Corporate Compensation and Governance
  • Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission
  • 1.5 The Stock Market
  • The Largest Stock Markets
  • Primary Versus Secondary Markets
  • Traditional Trading Venues
  • Interview With Frank Hatheway
  • New Competition and Market Changes
  • Dark Pools
  • Listing Standards
  • Other Financial Markets
  • NYSE, BATS, DJIA, S&P 500: Awash in Acronyms
  • 1.6 Financial Institutions
  • The Financial Cycle
  • Types of Financial Institutions
  • Role of Financial Institutions
  • Summary
  • Problems
  • Chapter 2. Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis
  • 2.1 Firms’ Disclosure of Financial Information
  • Preparation of Financial Statements
  • I nternational Financial Reporting Standards
  • Interview With Ruth Porat
  • Types of Financial Statements
  • 2.2 The Balance Sheet
  • Assets
  • Liabilities
  • Stockholders’ Equity
  • Market Value Versus Book Value
  • Market-to-Book Ratio
  • Enterprise Value
  • 2.3 The Income Statement
  • Earnings Calculations
  • EBITDA
  • 2.4 The Statement of Cash Flows
  • Operating Activity
  • Investment Activity
  • Financing Activity
  • 2.5 Other Financial Statement Information
  • Statement of Stockholders’ Equity
  • Management Discussion and Analysis
  • Notes to the Financial Statements
  • 2.6 Financial Statement Analysis
  • Profitability Ratios
  • Liquidity Ratios
  • Asset Efficiency
  • Working Capital Ratios
  • Interest Coverage Ratios
  • Leverage Ratios
  • Valuation Ratios
  • Common Mistake Mismatched Ratios
  • Operating Returns
  • The DuPont Identity
  • 2.7 Financial Reporting in Practice
  • Enron
  • The Sarbanes-Oxley Act
  • Dodd-Frank Act
  • Global Financial Crisis Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi Scheme
  • The Financial Statements: A Useful Starting Point
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Part 2: Interest Rates and Valuing Cash Flows
  • Chapter 3. Time Value of Money: An Introduction
  • 3.1 Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Role of the Financial Manager
  • Quantifying Costs and Benefits
  • 3.2 Market Prices and the Valuation Principle
  • The Valuation Principle
  • Why There Can Be Only One Competitive Price for a Good
  • Your Personal Financial Decisions
  • 3.3 The Time Value of Money and Interest Rates
  • The Time Value of Money
  • The Interest Rate: Converting Cash Across Time
  • Timelines
  • 3.4 Valuing Cash Flows at Different Points in Time
  • Rule 1: Comparing and Combining Values
  • Common Mistake Summing Cash Flows Across Time
  • Rule 2: Compounding
  • Rule of 72
  • Rule 3: Discounting
  • Using a Financial Calculator
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Chapter 4. Time Value of Money: Valuing Cash Flow Streams
  • 4.1 Valuing a Stream of Cash Flows
  • Applying the Rules of Valuing Cash Flows to a Cash Flow Stream
  • Using a Financial Calculator: Solving for Present and Future Values of Cash Flow Streams
  • 4.2 Perpetuities
  • Perpetuities
  • Historical Examples of Perpetuities
  • Common Mistake Discounting One Too Many Times
  • 4.3 Annuities
  • Present Value of an Annuity
  • Future Value of an Annuity
  • 4.4 Growing Cash Flows
  • Growing Perpetuity
  • Growing Annuity
  • 4.5 Solving for Variables Other Than Present Value or Future Value
  • Solving for the Cash Flows
  • Rate of Return
  • Solving for the Number of Periods
  • 4.6 Non-Annual Cash Flows
  • The Big Picture
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 4 Appendix Using a Financial Calculator
  • Chapter 5. Interest Rates
  • 5.1 Interest Rate Quotes and Adjustments
  • The Effective Annual Rate
  • Adjusting the Discount Rate to Different Time Periods
  • Annual Percentage Rates
  • Common Mistake Using the EAR in the Annuity Formula
  • 5.2 Application: Discount Rates and Loans
  • Computing Loan Payments
  • Global Financial Crisis Teaser Rates and Subprime Loans
  • Computing the Outstanding Loan Balance
  • 5.3 The Determinants of Interest Rates
  • Inflation and Real Versus Nominal Rates
  • Investment and Interest Rate Policy
  • How Is Inflation Actually Calculated?
  • The Yield Curve and Discount Rates
  • Interview With Dr. Janet Yellen
  • Common Mistake Using the Annuity Formula When Discount Rates Vary
  • The Yield Curve and the Economy
  • 5.4 The Opportunity Cost of Capital
  • Interest Rates, Discount Rates, and the Cost of Capital
  • Common Mistake States Dig a $3 Trillion Hole by Discounting at the Wrong Rate
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Chapter 6. Bonds
  • 6.1 Bond Terminology
  • 6.2 Zero-Coupon Bonds
  • Zero-Coupon Bond Cash Flows
  • Yield to Maturity of a Zero-Coupon Bond
  • Global Financial Crisis Negative Bond Yields
  • Risk-Free Interest Rates
  • 6.3 Coupon Bonds
  • Coupon Bond Cash Flows
  • The U.S. Treasury Market
  • Yield to Maturity of a Coupon Bond
  • Finding Bond Prices on the Web
  • Coupon Bond Price Quotes
  • 6.4 Why Bond Prices Change
  • Interest Rate Changes and Bond Prices
  • Time and Bond Prices
  • Interest Rate Risk and Bond Prices
  • Clean and Dirty Prices for Coupon Bonds
  • Bond Prices in Practice
  • 6.5 Corporate Bonds
  • Credit Risk
  • Are Treasuries Really Default-Free Securities?
  • Interview With Lisa Black
  • Corporate Bond Yields
  • Bond Ratings
  • Corporate Yield Curves
  • The Credit Crisis and Bond Yields
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 6 Appendix A Solving for the Yield to Maturity of a Bond Using a Financial Calculator
  • Chapter 6 Appendix B The Yield Curve and the Law of One Price
  • Chapter 7. Stock Valuation
  • 7.1 Stock Basics
  • Stock Market Reporting: Stock Quotes
  • Common Stock
  • Preferred Stock
  • 7.2 The Mechanics of Stock Trades
  • 7.3 The Dividend-Discount Model
  • A One-Year Investor
  • Dividend Yields, Capital Gains, and Total Returns
  • A Multiyear Investor
  • Dividend-Discount Model Equation
  • 7.4 Estimating Dividends in the Dividend-Discount Model
  • Constant Dividend Growth
  • Dividends Versus Investment and Growth
  • Changing Growth Rates
  • Common Mistake Forgetting to “Grow” This Year’s Dividend
  • Value Drivers and the Dividend-Discount Model
  • 7.5 Limitations of the Dividend-Discount Model
  • Uncertain Dividend Forecasts
  • Non-Dividend-Paying Stocks
  • 7.6 Share Repurchases and the Total Payout Model
  • 7.7 Putting It All Together
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Part 2 Integrative Case
  • Part 3: Valuation and the Firm
  • Chapter 8. Investment Decision Rules
  • 8.1 The NPV Decision Rule
  • Net Present Value
  • The NPV Decision Rule
  • 8.2 Using the NPV Rule
  • Organizing the Cash Flows and Computing the NPV
  • The NPV Profile
  • Measuring Sensitivity with IRR
  • Alternative Rules Versus the NPV Rule
  • 8.3 Alternative Decision Rules
  • Using Excel Computing NPV and IRR
  • The Payback Rule
  • The Internal Rate of Return Rule
  • Common Mistake IRR Versus the IRR Rule
  • Modified Internal Rate of Return
  • Why Do Rules Other Than the NPV Rule Persist?
  • 8.4 Choosing Among Projects
  • Differences in Scale
  • Interview With Dick Grannis
  • Timing of the Cash Flows
  • 8.5 Evaluating Projects with Different Lives
  • Important Considerations When Using the Equivalent Annual Annuity
  • 8.6 Choosing Among Projects When Resources Are Limited
  • Evaluating Projects with Different Resource Requirements
  • 8.7 Putting It All Together
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 8 Appendix Creating the NPV Profile Using Excel’s Data Table Function
  • Chapter 9. Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
  • 9.1 The Capital Budgeting Process
  • 9.2 Forecasting Incremental Earnings
  • Operating Expenses Versus Capital Expenditures
  • Incremental Revenue and Cost Estimates
  • Taxes
  • Incremental Earnings Forecast
  • 9.3 Determining Incremental Free Cash Flow
  • Converting from Earnings to Free Cash Flow
  • Calculating Free Cash Flow Directly
  • Calculating the NPV
  • Using Excel Capital Budgeting Using a Spreadsheet Program
  • 9.4 Other Effects on Incremental Free Cash Flows
  • Opportunity Costs
  • Common Mistake The Opportunity Cost of an Idle Asset
  • Project Externalities
  • Sunk Costs
  • Common Mistake The Sunk Cost Fallacy
  • Adjusting Free Cash Flow
  • Replacement Decisions
  • 9.5 Analyzing the Project
  • Sensitivity Analysis
  • Break-Even Analysis
  • Interview With David Holland
  • Scenario Analysis
  • Using Excel Project Analysis Using Excel
  • 9.6 Real Options in Capital Budgeting
  • Option to Delay
  • Option to Expand
  • Option to Abandon
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 9 Appendix MACRS Depreciation
  • Chapter 10. Stock Valuation: A Second Look
  • 10.1 The Discounted Free Cash Flow Model
  • Valuing the Enterprise
  • Implementing the Model
  • Connection to Capital Budgeting
  • 10.2 Valuation Based on Comparable Firms
  • Valuation Multiples
  • Limitations of Multiples
  • Comparison with Discounted Cash Flow Methods
  • 10.3 Stock Valuation Techniques: A Final Word
  • Interview With Douglas Kehring
  • 10.4 Information, Competition, and Stock Prices
  • Information in Stock Prices
  • Competition and Efficient Markets
  • Forms of Market Efficiency
  • Lessons for Investors and Corporate Managers
  • Nobel Prize The 2013 Prize: An Enigma?
  • The Efficient Markets Hypothesis Versus No Arbitrage
  • 10.5 Individual Biases and Trading
  • Excessive Trading and Overconfidence
  • Hanging On to Losers and the Disposition Effect
  • Investor Attention, Mood, and Experience
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Part 3 Integrative Case
  • Part 4: Risk and Return
  • Chapter 11. Risk and Return in Capital Markets
  • 11.1 A First Look at Risk and Return
  • 11.2 Historical Risks and Returns of Stocks
  • Computing Historical Returns
  • Average Annual Returns
  • Arithmetic Average Returns Versus Compound Annual Returns
  • The Variance and Volatility of Returns
  • Common Mistake Mistakes When Computing Standard Deviation
  • Using Excel Computing the Standard Deviation of Historical Returns
  • The Normal Distribution
  • 11.3 The Historical Tradeoff Between Risk and Return
  • The Returns of Large Portfolios
  • The Returns of Individual Stocks
  • 11.4 Common Versus Independent Risk
  • Theft Versus Earthquake Insurance: An Example
  • Types of Risk
  • 11.5 Diversification in Stock Portfolios
  • Unsystematic Versus Systematic Risk
  • Global Financial Crisis Diversification Benefits During Market Crashes
  • Diversifiable Risk and the Risk Premium
  • The Importance of Systematic Risk
  • Common Mistake A Fallacy of Long-Run Diversification
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 12. Systematic Risk and the Equity Risk Premium
  • 12.1 The Expected Return of a Portfolio
  • Portfolio Weights
  • Portfolio Returns
  • Expected Portfolio Return
  • 12.2 The Volatility of a Portfolio
  • Diversifying Risks
  • Measuring Stocks’ Co-Movement: Correlation
  • Using Excel Calculating the Correlation Between Two Sets of Returns
  • Computing a Portfolio’s Variance and Standard Deviation
  • The Volatility of a Large Portfolio
  • Nobel Prize Harry Markowitz
  • 12.3 Measuring Systematic Risk
  • Role of the Market Portfolio
  • Stock Market Indexes as the Market Portfolio
  • Market Risk and Beta
  • Index Funds
  • Common Mistake Mixing Standard Deviation and Beta
  • Estimating Beta from Historical Returns
  • Using Excel Calculating a Stock’s Beta
  • 12.4 Putting It All Together: The Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • The CAPM Equation Relating Risk to Expected Return
  • Why Not Estimate Expected Returns Directly?
  • Nobel Prize William Sharpe
  • The Security Market Line
  • The CAPM and Portfolios
  • Summary of the Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • The Big Picture
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Chapter 12 Appendix Alternative Models of Systematic Risk
  • Chapter 13. The Cost of Capital
  • 13.1 A First Look at the Weighted Average Cost of Capital
  • The Firm’s Capital Structure
  • Opportunity Cost and the Overall Cost of Capital
  • Weighted Averages and the Overall Cost of Capital
  • Weighted Average Cost of Capital Calculations
  • 13.2 The Firm’s Costs of Debt and Equity Capital
  • Cost of Debt Capital
  • Common Mistake Using the Coupon Rate as the Cost of Debt
  • Cost of Preferred Stock Capital
  • Cost of Common Stock Capital
  • 13.3 A Second Look at the Weighted Average Cost of Capital
  • WACC Equation
  • Weighted Average Cost of Capital in Practice
  • Methods in Practice
  • 13.4 Using the WACC to Value a Project
  • Key Assumptions
  • WACC Method Application: Extending the Life of an AT&T Facility
  • Summary of the WACC Method
  • 13.5 Project-Based Costs of Capital
  • Common Mistake Using a Single Cost of Capital in Multi-Divisional Firms
  • Cost of Capital for a New Acquisition
  • Divisional Costs of Capital
  • Interview With Shelagh Glaser
  • 13.6 When Raising External Capital Is Costly
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Part 4 Integrative Case
  • Part 5: Long-Term Financing
  • Chapter 14. Raising Equity Capital
  • 14.1 Equity Financing for Private Companies
  • Sources of Funding
  • Interview With Kevin Laws
  • Crowdfunding: The Wave of the Future?
  • Securities and Valuation
  • Exiting an Investment in a Private Company
  • 14.2 Taking Your Firm Public: The Initial Public Offering
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Going Public
  • Primary and Secondary IPO Offerings
  • Other IPO Types
  • Google’s IPO
  • An Alternative to the Traditional IPO: Spotify’s Direct Listing
  • 14.3 IPO Puzzles
  • Underpriced IPOs
  • “Hot” and “Cold” IPO Markets
  • Global Financial Crisis 2008–2009: A Very Cold IPO Market
  • High Cost of Issuing an IPO
  • Poor Post-IPO Long-Run Stock Performance
  • 14.4 Raising Additional Capital: The Seasoned Equity Offering
  • SEO Process
  • SEO Price Reaction
  • SEO Costs
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 15. Debt Financing
  • 15.1 Corporate Debt
  • Private Debt
  • Debt Financing at Hertz: Bank Loans
  • Debt Financing at Hertz: Private Placements
  • Public Debt
  • Debt Financing at Hertz: Public Debt
  • 15.2 Other Types of Debt
  • Sovereign Debt
  • Municipal Bonds
  • Detroit’s Art Museum at Risk
  • Asset-Backed Securities
  • Global Financial Crisis CDOs, Subprime Mortgages, and the Financial Crisis
  • 15.3 Bond Covenants
  • Types of Covenants
  • Advantages of Covenants
  • Application: Hertz’s Covenants
  • 15.4 Repayment Provisions
  • Call Provisions
  • New York City Calls Its Municipal Bonds
  • Sinking Funds
  • Convertible Provisions
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 15 Appendix Using a Financial Calculatorto Calculate Yield to Call
  • Part 5 Integrative Case
  • Part 6: Capital Structure and Payout Policy
  • Chapter 16. Capital Structure
  • 16.1 Capital Structure Choices
  • Capital Structure Choices Across Industries
  • Capital Structure Choices Within Industries
  • 16.2 Capital Structure in Perfect Capital Markets
  • Application: Financing a New Business
  • Leverage and Firm Value
  • The Effect of Leverage on Risk and Return
  • Homemade Leverage
  • Leverage and the Cost of Capital
  • Common Mistake Capital Structure Fallacies
  • Global Financial Crisis Bank Capital Regulation and the ROE Fallacy
  • MM and the Real World
  • Nobel Prize Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller
  • 16.3 Debt and Taxes
  • The Interest Tax Deduction and Firm Value
  • Value of the Interest Tax Shield
  • The Interest Tax Shield with Permanent Debt 541
  • Leverage and the WACC with Taxes
  • Debt and Taxes: The Bottom Line
  • 16.4 The Costs of Bankruptcy and Financial Distress
  • Direct Costs of Bankruptcy
  • Bankruptcy Can Be Expensive
  • Indirect Costs of Financial Distress
  • 16.5 Optimal Capital Structure: The Tradeoff Theory
  • Differences Across Firms
  • Optimal Leverage
  • 16.6 Additional Consequences of Leverage: Agency Costs and Information
  • Agency Costs
  • Airlines Use Financial Distress to Their Advantage
  • Global Financial Crisis Moral Hazard and Government Bailouts
  • Financial Distress and Rolling the Dice, Literally
  • Debt and Information
  • 16.7 Capital Structure: Putting It All Together
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Chapter 16 Appendix The Bankruptcy Code
  • Chapter 17. Payout Policy
  • 17.1 Cash Distributions to Shareholders
  • Dividends
  • Share Repurchases
  • 17.2 Dividends Versus Share Repurchases in a Perfect Capital Market
  • Alternative Policy 1: Pay a Dividend with Excess Cash
  • Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend)
  • Common Mistake Repurchases and the Supply of Shares
  • Alternative Policy 3: High Dividend (Equity Issue)
  • Modigliani-Miller and Dividend Policy Irrelevance
  • Common Mistake The Bird in the Hand Fallacy
  • Dividend Policy with Perfect Capital Markets
  • 17.3 The Tax Disadvantage of Dividends
  • Taxes on Dividends and Capital Gains
  • Optimal Dividend Policy with Taxes
  • Tax Differences Across Investors
  • 17.4 Payout Versus Retention of Cash
  • Retaining Cash with Perfect Capital Markets
  • Retaining Cash with Imperfect Capital Markets
  • 17.5 Signaling with Payout Policy
  • Dividend Smoothing
  • Dividend Signaling
  • Royal & SunAlliance’s Dividend Cut
  • Signaling and Share Repurchases
  • Interview With John Connors
  • 17.6 Stock Dividends, Splits, and Spin-Offs
  • Stock Dividends and Splits
  • Berkshire Hathaway’s A and B Shares
  • Spin-Offs
  • 17.7 Advice for the Financial Manager
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Part 6 Integrative Case
  • Part 7: Financial Planning and Forecasting
  • Chapter 18. Financial Modeling and Pro Forma Analysis
  • 18.1 Goals of Long-Term Financial Planning
  • Identify Important Linkages
  • Analyze the Impact of Potential Business Plans
  • Plan for Future Funding Needs
  • 18.2 Forecasting Financial Statements: The Percent of Sales Method
  • Percent of Sales Method
  • Pro Forma Income Statement
  • Pro Forma Balance Sheet
  • Common Mistake Confusing Stockholders’ Equity with Retained Earnings
  • Making the Balance Sheet Balance: Net New Financing
  • Choosing a Forecast Target
  • 18.3 Forecasting a Planned Expansion
  • KMS Designs’ Expansion: Financing Needs
  • KMS Designs’ Expansion: Pro Forma Income Statement
  • Common Mistake Treating Forecasts as Fact
  • Forecasting the Balance Sheet
  • 18.4 Growth and Firm Value
  • Sustainable Growth Rate and External Financing
  • 18.5 Valuing the Expansion
  • Forecasting Free Cash Flows
  • Common Mistake Confusing Totaland Incremental Net Working Capital
  • KMS Designs’ Expansion: Effect on Firm Value
  • Optimal Timing and the Option to Delay
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Chapter 18 Appendix The Balance Sheetand Statement of Cash Flows
  • Chapter 19. Working Capital Management
  • 19.1 Overview of Working Capital
  • The Cash Cycle
  • Working Capital Needs by Industry
  • Firm Value and Working Capital
  • 19.2 Trade Credit
  • Trade Credit Terms
  • Trade Credit and Market Frictions
  • Common Mistake Using APR Instead of EARto Compute the Cost of Trade Credit
  • Managing Float
  • 19.3 Receivables Management
  • Determining the Credit Policy
  • The 5 C’s of Credit
  • Monitoring Accounts Receivable
  • 19.4 Payables Management
  • Determining Accounts Payable Days Outstanding
  • Stretching Accounts Payable
  • 19.5 Inventory Management
  • Benefits of Holding Inventory
  • Costs of Holding Inventory
  • Inventory Management Adds to the Bottom Line at Gap
  • 19.6 Cash Management
  • Motivation for Holding Cash
  • Alternative Investments
  • Hoarding Cash
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 20. Short-Term Financial Planning
  • 20.1 Forecasting Short-Term Financing Needs
  • Application: Springfield Snowboards, Inc.
  • Negative Cash Flow Shocks
  • Positive Cash Flow Shocks
  • Seasonalities
  • The Cash Budget
  • 20.2 The Matching Principle
  • Permanent Working Capital
  • Temporary Working Capital
  • Permanent Versus Temporary Working Capital
  • Financing Policy Choices
  • 20.3 Short-Term Financing with Bank Loans
  • Single, End-of-Period Payment Loan
  • Line of Credit
  • Bridge Loan
  • Common Loan Stipulations and Fees
  • 20.4 Short-Term Financing with Commercial paper
  • Short-Term Financing and the Financial Crisis of the Fall of 2008
  • 20.5 Short-Term Financing with Secured Financing
  • Accounts Receivable as Collateral
  • A Seventeenth-Century Financing Solution
  • Inventory as Collateral
  • Loan Guarantees: The Ex-Im Bank Controversy
  • 20.6 Putting It All Together: Creating a Short-Term Financial Plan
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Part 7 Integrative Case
  • Part 8: Special Topics
  • Chapter 21. Option Applications and Corporate Finance
  • 21.1 Option Basics
  • Option Contracts
  • Stock Option Quotations
  • Options on Other Financial Securities
  • Options Are for More Than Just Stocks
  • 21.2 Option Payoffs at Expiration
  • The Long Position in an Option Contract
  • The Short Position in an Option Contract
  • Profits for Holding an Option to Expiration
  • Returns for Holding an Option to Expiration
  • 21.3 Factors Affecting Option Prices
  • Strike Price and Stock Price
  • Option Prices and the Exercise Date
  • Option Prices and the Risk-Free Rate
  • Option Prices and Volatility
  • 21.4 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Formula
  • 21.5 Put-Call Parity
  • Portfolio Insurance
  • 21.6 Options and Corporate Finance
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Chapter 22. Mergers and Acquisitions
  • 22.1 Background and Historical Trends
  • Merger Waves
  • Types of Mergers
  • 22.2 Market Reaction to a Takeover
  • 22.3 Reasons to Acquire
  • Economies of Scale and Scope
  • Vertical Integration
  • Expertise
  • Monopoly Gains
  • Efficiency Gains
  • Tax Savings from Operating Losses
  • Diversification
  • Earnings Growth
  • Managerial Motives to Merge
  • 22.4 The Takeover Process
  • Valuation
  • The Offer
  • Merger “Arbitrage”
  • Tax and Accounting Issues
  • Board and Shareholder Approval
  • 22.5 Takeover Defenses
  • Poison Pills
  • Staggered Boards
  • White Knights
  • Golden Parachutes
  • Recapitalization
  • Other Defensive Strategies
  • Regulatory Approval
  • Weyerhaeuser’s Hostile Bid for Willamette Industries
  • 22.6 Who Gets the Value Added from a Takeover?
  • The Free Rider Problem
  • Toeholds
  • The Leveraged Buyout
  • The Leveraged Buyout of RJR-Nabisco by KKR
  • The Freezeout Merger
  • Competition
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Chapter 23. International Corporate Finance
  • 23.1 Foreign Exchange
  • The Foreign Exchange Market
  • Exchange Rates
  • 23.2 Exchange Rate Risk
  • Exchange Rate Fluctuations
  • Brexit
  • Hedging with Forward Contracts
  • Cash-and-Carry and the Pricing of Currency Forwards
  • Hedging Exchange Rate Risk with Options
  • 23.3 Internationally Integrated Capital Markets
  • Common Mistake Forgetting to Flip theExchange Rate
  • 23.4 Valuation of Foreign Currency Cash Flows
  • Application: Ityesi, Inc.
  • The Law of One Price as a Robustness Check
  • 23.5 Valuation and International Taxation
  • The TCJA: A New Approach to International Taxation
  • 23.6 Internationally Segmented Capital Markets
  • Differential Access to Markets
  • Macro-Level Distortions
  • Implications of Internationally Segmented Capital Markets
  • 23.7 Capital Budgeting with Exchange Rate Risk
  • Application: Ityesi, Inc.
  • Conclusion
  • Summary
  • Critical Thinking
  • Problems
  • Data Case
  • Index
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