This textbook represents the cutting edge of what the top scholars and practitioners know about finance - at long last made practical and accessible. It is a corporate book, yet it is cutting edge investment theory, presenting the forefront on interpreting what the data says about the theories, cutting edge on risk management, capital budgeting, and on the issues that need to be considered to determine both a firm's proper mix of debt and equity financing and its value maximizing dividend policy. It tells the practitioner/student how to do it and is the first book to teach, with careful step-by-step pedagogy, and how to think for themselves about it. The goal of this text, and this revision in particular, is to present the material in as simple and accessible manner as possible without glossing over the important details. Rather than organizing the text around financial theory and then thinking about potential applications, the authors began by thinking about finance practice, and then organized the book around the tools needed to create value in the financial management of a corporation.
Les mer
Talks about investment theory, theories on risk management, capital budgeting, and on the issues that need to be considered to determine both a firm's proper mix of debt and equity financing and its value maximizing dividend policy. This title aims to tell the practitioner/student how to do it, and how to think for themselves about it.
Les mer
Part I. Financial Markets and Financial Instruments 1. Raising Capital 2. Debt Financing 3. Equity Financing Part II. Valuing Financial Assets 4. Portfolio Tools 5. Mean-Variance Analysis and the Capital Asset Pricing Model 6. Factor Models and the Arbitrage Pricing Theory 7. Pricing Derivatives 8. Options Part III. Valuing Real Assets 9. Discounting and Valuation 10. Investing in Risk-Free Projects 11. Investing in Risky Projects 12. Allocating Capital and Corporate Strategy 13. Corporate Taxes and the Impact of Financing On Real Asset Valuation Part IV. Capital Financial Structure 14. How Taxes Affect Financing Choices 15. How Taxes Affect Dividends and Share Repurchases 16. Bankruptcy Costs and Debt Holder-Equity Holder Conflicts 17. Capital Structure and Corporate Strategy Part V. Incentives, Information, and Corporate Control 18. How Managerial Incentives Affects Financial Decisions 19. The Information Conveyed by Financial Decisions 20. Mergers and Acquisitions Part VI. Risk Management 21. Risk Management and Corporate Strategy 22. The Practice of Hedging 23. Interest Rate Risk Management Appendix A. Mathematical Tables
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780071123419
Publisert
2001-11-01
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
McGraw-Hill Publishing Co.
Vekt
1746 gr
Høyde
256 mm
Bredde
205 mm
Dybde
40 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
912

Biographical note

Mark Grinblatt, University of California at Los Angeles, Ph.D. Yale Mark Grinblatt is Professor of Finance at UCLA's Anderson School, where he currently serves as chair of the Finance area, and where he began his career in 1981. He is also a director on the board of Salomon Swapco, Inc., a consultant to numerous firms, and serves as an associate editor of Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis. From 1987 to 1989, Professor Grinblatt was a visiting professor at the Wharton School and while on leave from UCLA in 1989 and 1990, he was a vice-president for Salomon Brothers, Inc., valuing complex derivatives for the fixed income arbitrage trading group in the firm. Professor Grinblatt is a noted teacher at UCLA, having been awarded teacher of the year in 1993 for UCLA's Fully-Employed MBA Program by a vote of the students. This award was based on his teaching of a course designed around early drafts of this textbook. Professor Grinblatt's areas of expertise include investments, performance evaluation of fund managers, fixed income markets, corporate finance and derivatives. Sheridan Titman, University of Texas at Austin, Ph.D. Carnegie Mellon Sheridan Titman holds the Walter W. McAllister Centennial Chair in Financial Services at the University of Texas. He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a consultant to a number of firms. Professor Titman began his academic career in 1980 at UCLA, where he served as the department chair for the finance group and as the Vice Chairman of the UCLA management school faculty. He has designed executive education programs in corporate financial strategy at UCLA and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, based on material developed for this textbook. In the 1988-89 academic year Professor Titman worked in Washington, D.C., as the special assistant to Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy, where he analyzed proposed legislation related to the stock and future markets, leveraged buyouts and takeovers. Between 1992 and 1994, he served as a founding professor of the school of Business and Management at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, where his duties included the vice chairmanship of the faculty and chairmanship of the faculty appointments committee. From 1994 to 1997 he was the John J. Collins, S.J. Chair in International Finance at Boston College. Professor Titman's areas of expertise include investments, performance evaluation of portfolio managers, corporate finance and real estate. He is an editor of the Review of Financial Studies and serves on the board of a number of other finance and real estate journals. He is a past director of the American Finance Association and a current director of the Asia Pacific Finance Association.