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Principles of Corporate Finance 14th INTERNATIONAL Edition by Richard Brealey, ISBN-13: 978-1265074159

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Principles of Corporate Finance 14th INTERNATIONAL Edition by Richard Brealey, ISBN-13: 978-1265074159

[PDF eBook eTextbook]

  • Publisher: ‎ McGraw-Hill Higher Education; 14th edition (July 19, 2022)
  •  Language: ‎ English
  •  1057 pages
  • ISBN-10: ‎ 1265074151
  • ISBN-13: ‎ 978-1265074159

The latest edition in the Principles of Corporate Finance dynasty, the 14th edition continues in its tradition of showing how theory applies to the very practical problems and decisions faced by financial managers. Looking at what financial managers do and why, the book aims to give readers a solid understanding of theory so that they know what questions to ask when times change and new problems need to be analyzed, eventually standing as a reference and a guide to help them make financial decisions, not just study them. This new edition welcomes Alex Edmans to the author team, whose global authority and expertise in corporate governance, responsible business and behavioural finance have been invaluable in bolstering coverage of these topics. A new chapter is entirely dedicated to the subject of balancing shareholder value with promoting the interests of all stakeholders, the potential conflicts inherent in this, and how a responsible business should behave. There have been several changes to chapter structure as well as expanded discussion of issues that have grown in importance since the previous edition including behavioural finance, and financial innovation driven by AI, big data and cloud computing. It has also grown to take a more international focus, to bring in more information and perspectives on major developing economies such as China and India, and looking at how financing and governance systems differ around the world. The new edition retains and builds on the pedagogical features of previous editions, with new chapter content summaries, new self-test questions interspersed at key points, and a raft of ‘Beyond the page’ examples available online through links in the text.

Table of Contents:

Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
About the Authors
Preface
Guided Tour
Supplements
Connect
Brief Contents
Contents
Part One: Value
1 Introduction to Corporate Finance
1-1 Corporate Investment and Financing Decisions
Investment Decisions
Financing Decisions
What Is a Corporation?
The Role of the Financial Manager
1-2 The Financial Goal of the Corporation
Shareholders Want Managers to Maximize Market Value
A Fundamental Result: Why Maximizing Shareholder Wealth Makes Sense
Should Managers Maximize Shareholder Wealth?
The Investment Trade-Off
Agency Problems and Corporate Governance
1-3 Key Questions in Corporate Finance
Key Takeaways
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Appendix: Why Maximizing Shareholder Value Makes Sense
2 How to Calculate Present Values
2-1 How to Calculate Future and Present Values
Calculating Future Values
Calculating Present Values
Valuing an Investment Opportunity
Net Present Value
Risk and Present Value
Present Values and Rates of Return
Calculating Present Values When There Are Multiple Cash Flows
The Opportunity Cost of Capital
2-2 How to Value Perpetuities and Annuities
How to Value Perpetuities
How to Value Annuities
Valuing Annuities Due
Calculating Annual Payments
Future Value of an Annuity
2-3 How to Value Growing Perpetuities and Annuities
Growing Perpetuities
Growing Annuities
2-4 How Interest Is Paid and Quoted
Continuous Compounding
Key Takeaways
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
3 Valuing Bonds
3-1 Using the Present Value Formula to Value Bonds
A Short Trip to Paris to Value a Government Bond
Back to the United States: Semiannual Coupons and Bond Prices
3-2 How Bond Prices Vary with Yields
Duration and Interest-Rate Sensitivity
3-3 The Term Structure of Interest Rates
Spot Rates, Bond Prices, and the Law of One Price
Measuring the Term Structure
Why the Discount Factor Declines as Futurity Increases
3-4 Explaining the Term Structure
Expectations Theory of the Term Structure
Interest Rate Risk
Inflation Risk
3-5 Real and Nominal Interest Rates
Indexed Bonds and the Real Rate of Interest
What Determines the Real Rate of Interest?
Inflation and Nominal Interest Rates
3-6 The Risk of Default
Corporate Bonds and Default Risk
Sovereign Bonds and Default Risk
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
4 Valuing Stocks
4-1 How Stocks Are Traded
Trading Results for Cummins
Market Price vs. Book Value
4-2 Valuation by Comparables
4-3 Dividends and Stock Prices
Dividends and Capital Gains
Two Versions of the Dividend Discount Model
4-4 Dividend Discount Model Applications
Using the Constant-Growth DCF Model to Set Water, Gas, and Electricity Prices
DCF Models with Two or More Stages of Growth
4-5 Income Stocks and Growth Stocks
Calculating the Present Value of Growth Opportunities for Establishment Electronics
4-6 Valuation Based on Free Cash Flow
Valuing the Concatenator Business
Valuation Format
Estimating Horizon Value
Key Takeaways
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Mini-Case: Reeby Sports
5 Net Present Value and Other Investment Criteria
5-1 A Review of the Net Present Value Rule
Net Present Value’s Competitors
Five Points to Remember about NPV
5-2 The Payback and Accounting Rate of Return Rules
The Payback Rule
Accounting Rate of Return
5-3 The Internal Rate of Return Rule
Calculating the IRR
The IRR Rule
Pitfall 1—Lending or Borrowing?
Pitfall 2—Multiple Rates of Return
Pitfall 3—Mutually Exclusive Projects
Pitfall 4—What Happens When There Is More Than One Opportunity Cost of Capital
The Verdict on IRR
5-4 Choosing Capital Investments When Resources Are Limited
How Important Is Capital Rationing in Practice?
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Mini-Case: Vegetron’s CFO Calls Again
6 Making Investment Decisions with the Net Present Value Rule
6-1 Forecasting a Project’s Cash Flows
Rule 1: Discount Cash Flows, Not Profits
Rule 2: Discount Incremental Cash Flows and Ignore Non-Incremental Cash Flows
Rule 3: Treat Inflation Consistently
Rule 4: Separate Investment and Financing Decisions
Rule 5: Forecast Cash Flows after Taxes
6-2 Corporate Income Taxes
Depreciation Deductions
Tax on Salvage Value
Tax Loss Carry-Forwards
6-3 A Worked Example of a Project Analysis
The Three Components of Project Cash Flows
Cash Flow from Capital Investment
Operating Cash Flow
Investment in Working Capital
How to Construct a Set of Cash Flow Forecasts: An Example
Capital Investment
Operating Cash Flow
Investment in Working Capital
Accelerated Depreciation and First-Year Expensing
Project Analysis
6-4 How to Choose between Competing Projects
Problem 1: The Investment Timing Decision
Problem 2: The Choice between Long- and Short-Lived Equipment
Problem 3: When to Replace an Old Machine
Problem 4: Cost of Excess Capacity
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Mini-Case: New Economy Transport (A)
New Economy Transport (B)
Part Two: Risk
7 Introduction to Risk, Diversification, and Portfolio Selection
7-1 The Relationship between Risk and Return
Over a Century of Capital Market History
Using Historical Evidence to Evaluate Today’s Cost of Capital
7-2 How to Measure Risk
Variance and Standard Deviation
Calculating Risk
Estimating Future Risk
7-3 How Diversification Reduces Risk
Specific and Systematic Risk
Diversification with Many Stocks
7-4 Systematic Risk Is Market Risk
Portfolio Choice with Borrowing and Lending
Market Risk
7-5 Should Companies Diversify?
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
8 The Capital Asset Pricing Model
8-1 Market Risk Is Measured by Beta
The Market Portfolio
Why Betas Determine Portfolio Risk
8-2 The Relationship between Risk and Return
What If a Stock Did Not Lie on the Security Market Line?
The Capital Market Line and the Security Market Line
The Logic behind the Capital Asset Pricing Model
Intuition: Why Do High Beta and High Returns Go Together?
Applying the Capital Asset Pricing Model
8-3 Does the CAPM Hold in the Real World?
How Large Is the Return for Risk?
Are Returns Unrelated to All Other Characteristics?
8-4 Some Alternative Theories
Arbitrage Pricing Theory
A Comparison of the Capital Asset Pricing Model and Arbitrage Pricing Theory
The Three-Factor Model
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
9 Risk and the Cost of Capital
9-1 Company and Project Costs of Capital
Company Cost of Capital for CSX
Three Warnings
What about Investments That Are Not Average Risk?
Perfect Pitch and the Cost of Capital
9-2 Estimating Beta and the Company Cost of Capital
Estimating Beta
Portfolio Betas
9-3 Analyzing Project Risk
1. The Determinants of Asset Betas
2. Don’t Be Fooled by Diversifiable Risk
3. Avoid Fudge Factors in Discount Rates
Discount Rates for International Projects
9-4 Certainty Equivalents
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Mini-Case: The Jones Family Incorporated
Part Three: Best Practices in Capital Budgeting
10 Project Analysis
10-1 Sensitivity and Scenario Analysis
Value of Information
Limits to Sensitivity Analysis
Stress Tests and Scenario Analysis
10-2 Break-Even Analysis and Operating Leverage
Break-Even Analysis
Operating Leverage
10-3 Real Options and the Value of Flexibility
The Option to Expand
The Option to Abandon
Production Options
Timing Options
More on Decision Trees
Pro and Con Decision Trees
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Mini-Case: Waldo County
11 How to Ensure That Projects Truly Have Positive NPVs
11-1 Behavioral Biases in Investment Decisions
11-2 Avoiding Forecast Errors
11-3 How Competitive Advantage Translates into Positive NPVs
11-4 Marvin Enterprises Decides to Exploit a New Technology—An Example
Forecasting Prices of Gargle Blasters
The Value of Marvin’s New Expansion
Alternative Expansion Plans
The Value of Marvin Stock
The Lessons of Marvin Enterprises
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Mini-Case: Ecsy-Cola
Part Four: Financing Decisions and Market Efficiency
12 Efficient Markets and Behavioral Finance
12-1 Differences between Investment and Financing Decisions
NPV Matters for Both Investment and Financing Decisions
The NPV of Financing Decisions Is Zero in Efficient Markets
The NPV of Financing Decisions in Inefficient Markets
12-2 The Efficient Market Hypothesis
Forms of Market Efficiency
Why Do We Expect Markets to Be Efficient?
12-3 Implications of Market Efficiency
What Market Efficiency Does Not Imply
What if Markets Are Not Efficient? Implications for the Financial Manager
12-4 Are Markets Efficient? The Evidence
Weak-Form Efficiency
Semistrong-Form Efficiency
Strong-Form Efficiency
12-5 Behavioral Finance
Sentiment
Limits to Arbitrage
Agency and Incentive Problems
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
13 An Overview of Corporate Financing
13-1 Patterns of Corporate Financing
How Much Do Firms Borrow?
13-2 Equity
Ownership of the Corporation
Preferred Stock
13-3 Debt
The Different Kinds of Debt
A Debt by Any Other Name
13-4 The Role of the Financial System
The Payment Mechanism
Borrowing and Lending
Pooling Risk
Information Provided by Financial Markets
13-5 Financial Markets and Intermediaries
Financial Intermediaries
Investment Funds
Financial Institutions
13-6 Financial Markets and Intermediaries around the World
Conglomerates and Internal Capital Markets
13-7 The Fintech Revolution
Payment Systems
Person-to-Person Lending
Crowdfunding
AI/ML Credit Scoring
Distributed Ledgers and Blockchains
Cryptocurrencies
Initial Coin Offerings
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
14 How Corporations Issue Securities
14-1 Venture Capital
The Venture Capital Market
14-2 The Initial Public Offering
The Public-Private Choice
Arranging an Initial Public Offering
The Sale of Marvin Stock
The Underwriters
Costs of a New Issue
Underpricing of IPOs
Hot New-Issue Periods
The Long-Run Performance of IPO Stocks
Alternative Issue Procedures
Types of Auction: A Digression
14-3 Security Sales by Public Companies
Public Offers
The Costs of a Public Offer
Rights Issues
Market Reaction to Stock Issues
14-4 Private Placements
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Appendix: Marvin’s New-Issue Prospectus
Part Five: Payout Policy and Capital Structure
15 Payout Policy
15-1 Facts about Payout
How Firms Pay Dividends
How Firms Repurchase Stock
The Information Content of Dividends
The Information Content of Share Repurchases
15-2 Dividends or Repurchases? Does the Choice Affect Shareholder Value?
Dividends or Repurchases? An Example
Stock Repurchases and DCF Valuation Models
Dividends and Share Issues
15-3 Dividend Clienteles
15-4 Taxes and Payout Policy
Empirical Evidence on Payout Policies and Taxes
Alternatives to the U.S. Tax System
15-5 Payout Policy and the Life Cycle of the Firm
The Agency Costs of Idle Cash
Payout and Corporate Governance
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
16 Does Debt Policy Matter?
16-1 Financial Leverage and Shareholder Value
16-2 Modigliani and Miller’s Proposition 1
The Law of the Conservation of Value
An Example of Proposition 1
16-3 Leverage and Expected Returns: MM’s Proposition 2
Proposition 2
Leverage and the Cost of Equity
How Changing Capital Structure Affects the Equity Beta
Watch Out for Hidden Leverage
16-4 No Magic in Financial Leverage
Today’s Unsatisfied Clienteles Are Probably Interested in Financial Innovation
Imperfections and Opportunities
16-5 A Final Word on the Cost of Capital
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Mini-Case: Claxton Drywall Comes to the Rescue
17 How Much Should a Corporation Borrow?
17-1 Debt and Taxes
How Do Interest Tax Shields Contribute to the Value of Stockholders’ Equity?
Recasting Johnson & Johnson’s Capital Structure
MM and Corporate Tax
Corporate and Personal Taxes
17-2 Costs of Financial Distress
Bankruptcy Costs
Evidence on Bankruptcy Costs
Direct versus Indirect Costs of Bankruptcy
Financial Distress without Bankruptcy
Agency Costs of Financial Distress
Risk Shifting: The First Game
Refusing to Contribute Equity Capital: The Second Game
And Three More Games, Briefly
What the Games Cost
Costs of Distress Vary with Type of Asset
17-3 The Trade-Off Theory of Capital Structure
17-4 The Pecking Order of Financing Choices
Debt and Equity Issues with Asymmetric Information
Implications of the Pecking Order
The Bright Side and the Dark Side of Financial Slack
17-5 The Capital Structure Decision
The Evidence
Is There a Theory of Optimal Capital Structure?
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
18 Financing and Valuation
18-1 The After-Tax Weighted-Average Cost of Capital
Review of Assumptions
Mistakes People Make in Using the Weighted-Average Formula
18-2 Valuing Businesses
Valuing Rio Corporation
Estimating Horizon Value
Valuation by Comparables
Liquidation Value
WACC vs. the Flow-to-Equity Method
18-3 Using WACC in Practice
Some Tricks of the Trade
Adjusting WACC when Debt Ratios and Business Risks Differ
Three-Step Procedure for Finding WACCs at Different Debt Ratios
Unlevering and Relevering Betas
Calculating Divisional WACCs
The Assumption of a Constant Debt Ratio in the After-Tax WACC
The Modigliani–Miller Formula
18-4 Adjusted Present Value
APV for the Perpetual Crusher
Other Financing Side Effects
APV for Entire Businesses
APV and Limits on Interest Deductions
APV for International Investments
18-5 Your Questions Answered
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Appendix: Discounting Safe, Nominal Cash Flows
A Consistency Check
Part Six: Corporate Objectives and Governance
19 Agency Problems and Corporate Governance
19-1 What Agency Problems Should You Watch Out For?
Reduced Effort
Private Benefits
Overinvestment
Risk Taking
Short-Termism
19-2 Monitoring by the Board of Directors
U.S. and U.K. Boards of Directors
European Boards of Directors
19-3 Monitoring by Shareholders
Voting
Engagement
Exit
19-4 Monitoring by Auditors, Lenders, and Potential Acquirers
Auditors
Lenders
Takeovers
19-5 Management Compensation
Compensation Facts and Controversies
The Structure of CEO Pay
19-6 Government Regimes around the World
Ownership and Control in Japan
Ownership and Control in Germany
Ownership and Control in Other Countries
19-7 Do These Differences Matter?
Public Market Myopia
Growth Industries and Declining Industries
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
20 Stakeholder Capitalism and Responsible Business
20-1 Who Are the Stakeholders?
Employees
Customers
Suppliers
Local and Regional Communities
The Environment
The Government
20-2 The Case for Shareholder Capitalism
Government Policy Ensures Companies Will Engage in Socially Responsible Behavior
Maximizing Shareholder Value Allows Investors to Pursue Social Objectives
Maximizing Shareholder Value Requires a Company to Invest in Stakeholders
Enlightened Shareholder Value
Decision Making under Enlightened Shareholder Value
20-3 The Case for Stakeholder Capitalism
Well-Functioning Governments
No Comparative Advantage in Serving Society
Instrumental Decision Making Is Effective
The Challenge of Stakeholder Capitalism
Summary
20-4 Responsible Business
Defining Responsible Business
Decision Making in Responsible Businesses
Summary
20-5 Responsible Business in Practice
Shareholder Primacy in the United States and United Kingdom
Benefit Corporations
B Corps
Purpose
Reporting
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Part Seven: Options
21 Understanding Options
21-1 Calls, Puts, and Shares
Call Options and Payoff Diagrams
Put Options
Selling Calls and Puts
Payoff Diagrams Are Not Profit Diagrams
21-2 Financial Alchemy with Options
Spotting the Option
21-3 What Determines the Value of a Call Option?
Risk and Option Values
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
22 Valuing Options
22-1 A Simple Option-Valuation Model
Why Discounted Cash Flow Won’t Work for Options
Constructing Option Equivalents from Common Stocks and Borrowing
Risk-Neutral Valuation
Valuing the Amazon Put Option
Valuing the Put Option by the Risk-Neutral Method
The Relationship between Call and Put Prices
22-2 The Binomial Method for Valuing Options
Example: The Two-Step Binomial Method
The General Binomial Method
The Binomial Method and Decision Trees
22-3 The Black–Scholes Formula
Using the Black–Scholes Formula
How Black-Scholes Values Vary with the Stock Price
The Risk of an Option
The Black–Scholes Formula and the Binomial Method
Some Practical Examples
22-4 Early Exercise and Dividend Payments
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Mini-Case: Bruce Honiball’s Invention
23 Real Options
23-1 The Option to Expand
Questions and Answers about Blitzen’s Mark II
Other Expansion Options
23-2 Options in R&D
23-3 The Timing Option
Valuing the Malted Herring Option
Optimal Timing for Real Estate Development
23-4 The Abandonment Option
Bad News for the Perpetual Crusher
Abandonment Value and Project Life
Temporary Abandonment
23-5 Flexible Production and Procurement
Aircraft Purchase Options
23-6 Valuing Real Options
A Conceptual Problem?
What about Taxes?
Practical Challenges
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Part Eight: Debt Financing
24 Credit Risk and the Value of Corporate Debt
24-1 Yields on Corporate Debt
Distinguishing Promised and Expected Yields
What Determines the Yield Spread?
24-2 Valuing the Option to Default
Finding Bond Values
The Value of Corporate Equity
24-3 Predicting the Probability of Default
Statistical Models of Default
Structural Models of Default
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
25 The Many Different Kinds of Debt
25-1 Long-Term Corporate Bonds
Bond Terms
Security and Seniority
Asset-Backed Securities
Call Provisions
Sinking Funds
Bond Covenants
Privately Placed Bonds
Foreign Bonds and Eurobonds
25-2 Convertible Securities and Some Unusual Bonds
The Value of a Convertible at Maturity
Forcing Conversion
Why Do Companies Issue Convertibles?
Valuing Convertible Bonds
A Variation on Convertible Bonds: The Bond–Warrant Package
Innovation in the Bond Market
25-3 Bank Loans
Commitment
Maturity
Rate of Interest
Syndicated Loans
Security
Loan Covenants
25-4 Commercial Paper and Medium-Term Notes
Commercial Paper
Medium-Term Notes
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Mini-Case: The Shocking Demise of Mr. Thorndike
Appendix: Project Finance
Appendix Further Reading
26 Leasing
26-1 What Is a Lease?
26-2 Why Lease?
Sensible Reasons for Leasing
A Dubious Reason for Leasing
26-3 Rentals on an Operating Lease
Example of an Operating Lease
Lease or Buy?
26-4 Valuing Financial Leases
Example of a Financial Lease
Valuing the Lease Contract
Comparing the Lease with an Equivalent Loan
Financial Leases When There Are Limits on the Interest Tax Shield
Leasing and the Internal Revenue Service
26-5 When Do Financial Leases Pay?
Leasing around the World
26-6 Setting Up a Leveraged Lease
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Part Nine: Risk Management
27 Managing Risk
27-1 Why Manage Risk?
Reducing the Risk of Cash Shortfalls or Financial Distress
Agency Costs May Be Mitigated by Risk Management
The Evidence on Risk Management
27-2 Insurance
27-3 Reducing Risk with Financial Options
27-4 Forward and Futures Contracts
A Simple Forward Contract
Futures Exchanges
The Mechanics of Futures Trading
Trading and Pricing Financial Futures Contracts
Spot and Futures Prices—Commodities
More about Forwards and Futures
27-5 Interest Rate Risk
Forward Rates of Interest and the Term Structure
Borrowing and Lending at Forward Interest Rates
Forward Rate Agreements
Interest Rate Futures
27-6 Swaps
Interest Rate Swaps
Currency Swaps
Some Other Swaps
27-7 How to Set Up a Hedge
Hedging Interest Rate Risk
Hedge Ratios and Basis Risk
27-8 Is “Derivative” a Four-Letter Word?
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Mini-Case: Rensselaer Advisers
28 International Financial Management
28-1 The Foreign Exchange Market
28-2 Some Basic Relationships
Interest Rates and Exchange Rates
The Forward Premium and Changes in Spot Rates
Changes in the Exchange Rate and Inflation Rates
Interest Rates and Inflation Rates
Is Life Really That Simple?
28-3 Hedging Currency Risk
Transaction Exposure and Economic Exposure
28-4 International Investment Decisions
The Cost of Capital for International Investments
28-5 Political Risk
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test
Finance on the Web
Mini-Case: Exacta, s.a.
Part Ten: Financial Planning and Working Capital Management
29 Financial Analysis
29-1 Understanding Financial Statements
The Balance Sheet
The Income Statement
29-2 Measuring Company Performance
Economic Value Added
Accounting Rates of Return
Problems with EVA and Accounting Rates of Return
29-3 Measuring Efficiency
The DuPont Formula
Other Efficiency Measures
29-4 Measuring Leverage
Leverage and the Return on Equity
29-5 Measuring Liquidity
29-6 Interpreting Financial Ratios
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
30 Financial Planning
30-1 What Are the Links between Short-Term and Long-Term Financing Decisions?
30-2 Tracing and Forecasting Changes in Cash
Tracing Changes in Cash
Forecasting Dynamic’s Cash Needs
30-3 Developing a Short-Term Financial Plan
Dynamic Mattress’s Financing Plan
Evaluating the Plan
Short-Term Financial Planning Models
30-4 Using Long-Term Financial Planning Models
Why Build Financial Plans?
A Long-Term Financial Planning Model for Dynamic Mattress
Pitfalls in Model Design
Choosing a Plan
30-5 Long-Term Planning Models and Company Valuation
30-6 The Relationship between Growth and External Financing
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
31 Working Capital Management
31-1 The Working Capital Requirement
The Cash Cycle
31-2 Managing Inventories
31-3 Accounts Receivable Management
Terms of Sale
Credit Analysis
The Credit Decision
Collection Policy
31-4 Cash Management
How Purchases Are Paid For
Changes in Check Usage
Speeding Up Check Collections
Electronic Payment Systems
International Cash Management
Paying for Bank Services
31-5 Investing Surplus Cash
Investment Choices
Calculating the Yield on Money Market Investments
Returns on Money Market Investments
The International Money Market
Money Market Instruments
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Part Eleven: Mergers, Corporate Control, and Governance
32 Mergers
32-1 Types of Merger
32-2 Some Sensible Motives for Mergers
Economies of Scale and Scope
Economies of Vertical Integration
Complementary Resources
Changes in Corporate Control
Industry Consolidation
Logic Does Not Guarantee Success
32-3 Some Dubious Motives for Mergers
Diversification
Increasing Earnings per Share: The Bootstrap Game
Lower Borrowing Costs
Management Motives
32-4 Estimating Merger Gains and Costs
Estimating NPV When the Merger Is Financed by Cash
Estimating NPV When the Merger Is Financed by Stock
Asymmetric Information
More on Estimating Costs—What If the Target’s Stock Price Anticipates the Merger?
Right and Wrong Ways to Estimate the Benefits of Mergers
32-5 The Mechanics of a Merger
Mergers, Antitrust Law, and Popular Opposition
The Form of Acquisition
Merger Accounting
Some Tax Considerations
32-6 Takeovers and the Market for Corporate Control
32-7 Merger Waves and Merger Profitability
Merger Waves
Who Gains and Loses from Mergers?
Buyers vs. Sellers
Mergers and Society
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Finance on the Web
Appendix: Conglomerate Mergers and Value Additivity
33 Corporate Restructuring
33-1 Leveraged Buyouts
The RJR Nabisco LBO
Barbarians at the Gate?
Leveraged Restructurings
33-2 The Private-Equity Market
Private-Equity Partnerships
Are Private-Equity Funds Today’s Conglomerates?
33-3 Fusion and Fission in Corporate Finance
Spin-Offs
Carve-Outs
Asset Sales
Privatization and Nationalization
33-4 Bankruptcy
Is Chapter 11 Efficient?
Workouts
Alternative Bankruptcy Procedures
Key Takeaways
Further Reading
Problem Sets
Solutions to Self-Test Questions
Part Twelve: Conclusion
34 Conclusion: What We Do and Do Not Know about Finance
34-1 What We Do Know: The Seven Most Important Ideas in Finance
1. Net Present Value
2. The Capital Asset Pricing Model
3. Efficient Capital Markets
4. Value Additivity and the Law of Conservation of Value
5. Capital Structure Theory
6. Option Theory
7. Agency Theory
34-2 What We Do Not Know: 10 Unsolved Problems in Finance
1. What Determines Project Risk and Present Value?
2. Risk and Return—What Have We Missed?
3. How Important Are the Exceptions to the Efficient-Market Theory?
4. Is Management an Off-Balance-Sheet Liability?
5. How Can We Explain the Success of New Securities and New Markets?
6. How Can We Resolve the Payout Controversy?
7. What Risks Should a Firm Take?
8. What Is the Value of Liquidity?
9. How Can We Explain Merger Waves?
10. Why Are Financial Systems So Prone to Crisis?
34-3 A Final Word
Glossary
Index

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