Corporate finance

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Hauptverfasser: Berk, Jonathan B. 1962- (VerfasserIn), DeMarzo, Peter M. (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Boston [u.a.] Pearson 2011
Ausgabe:2. ed., global ed.
Schriftenreihe:The Prentice Hall series in finance
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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adam_text Titel: Corporate finance Autor: Berk, Jonathan B. Jahr: 2011 Brief Contents PARTI INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 The Corporation Chapter 2 Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis 2 19 PART II TOOLS Chapter 3 Arbitrage and Financial Decision Making Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money Chapter 5 Interest Rates 52 86 128 PART III BASIC VALUATION Chapter 6 Investment Decision Rules Chapter 7 Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting Chapter 8 Valuing Bonds Chapter 9 Valuing Stocks 156 182 217 251 PART IV RISK AND RETURN Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk Chapter 11 Optimal Portfolio Choice and the Capital Asset Pricing Model Chapter 12 Estimating the Cost of Capital Chapter 13 Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency 292 330 377 412 PARTV CAPITAL STRUCTURE Chapter 14 Capital Structure in a Perfect Market Chapter 15 Debt and Taxes Chapter 16 Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information Chapter 17 Payout Policy 450 478 509 551 PART VI VALUATION Chapter 18 Capital Budgeting and Valuation with Leverage Chapter 19 Valuation and Financial Modeling: A Case Study 594 641 Contents PART I INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 The Corporation 2 1.1 1.2 1.3 The FourTypes of Firms 3 Sole Proprietorships 3 Partnerships 4 Limited Liability Companies 5 Corporations 5 Tax Implications for Corporate Entities 6 a INTERVIEW with David Viniar 7 a Corporate Taxation Around the World 8 Ownership Versus Control of Corporations 8 The Corporate Management Team 9 The Financial Manager 9 The Goal of the Firm 10 Ethics and Incentives within Corporations 10 W FINANCIAL CRISIS Lehman Brothers Bankruptcy 13 The Stock Market 13 Primary and Secondary Stock Markets 13 The Largest Stock Markets 14 NYSE 14 8 INTERVIEW with Jean-Francois Theodore 15 NASDAQ 16 Reac 16 ^ Key Terms 1 17 « P obiems 17 Chapter 2 Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis 19 2.1 Firms Disclosure of Financial Information 20 Preparation of Financial Statements a International Financial Reporting Standards 20 a INTERVIEW with Sue Frieden 21 Types of Financial Statements 22 20 2.2 The Balance Sheet 22 Assets 23 Liabilities 24 Shareholders Equity 25 2.3 Balance Sheet Analysis 26 Market-to-Book Ratio 26 Debt-Equity Ratio 26 Enterprise Value 27 Other Balance Sheet Information 28 2.4 The Income Statement 28 Earnings Calculations 28 2.5 Income Statement Analysis 30 Profitability Ratios 30 Working Capital Ratios 31 EBITDA 31 Leverage (Gearing) Ratios 32 Investment Returns 32 The DuPont Identity 32 Valuation Ratios 33 B COMMON MISTAKE Mismatched Ratios 33 2.6 The Statement of Cash Flows 35 Operating Activity 36 Investment Activity 36 Financing Activity 36 2.7 Other Financial Statement Information 37 Management Discussion and Analysis 38 Statement of Changes in Shareholders Equity 38 Notes to the Financial Statements 38 2.8 Financial Reporting in Practice 39 Enron 39 WorldCom 39 Sarbanes-Oxley Act 40 a FINANCIAL CRISIS Bernard Madoff s Ponzi Scheme 41 Difficulties in International Financial Statement Analysis 41 Summary 42 « Key Terms 43 ¦ Further Reading 44 m Problems 44 Data Case 49 Contents PART II TOOLS Chapter 3 Arbitrage and Financial Decision Making 52 3.1 Valuing Decisions 53 Analyzing Costs and Benefits 53 Using Market Prices to Determine Cash Values 54 B When Competitive Market Prices Are Not Available 56 3.2 Interest Rates and theTime Value of Money 56 The Time Value of Money 56 The Interest Rate: An Exchange Rate Across Time 56 3.3 Present Value and the NPV Decision Rule 59 Net Present Value 59 The NPV Decision Rule 60 NPV and Cash Needs 62 3.4 Arbitrage and the Law of One Price 63 Arbitrage 63 ¦ NASDAQ SOES Bandits 64 Law of One Price 64 3.5 No-Arbitrage and Security Prices 65 Valuing a Security with the Law of One Price 65 B An Old Joke 65 The NPV of Trading Securities and Firm Decision Making 68 Valuing a Portfolio 69 a Stock Index Arbitrage 70 a FINANCIAL CRISIS Liquidity and the Informational Role of Prices 71 Where Do We Go from Here? 71 Summary 72 ¦ Key Terms 73 m Further Reading 73 a Problems 74 Appendix The Price of Risk 77 Arbitrage with Transactions Costs 83 Summary 84 * Key Terms 84 ¦ Problems 84 Chapter 4 The Time Value of Money 86 4.1 TheTimeline 87 4.2 TheThree Rules of TimeTravel 88 Rule 1: Comparing and Combining Values 88 Rule 2: Moving Cash Flows Forward in Time 89 Rule 3: Moving Cash Flows Back in Time 90 Applying the Rules of TimeTravel 92 4.3 Valuing a Stream of Cash Flows 94 4.4 Calculating the Net Present Value 97 4.5 Perpetuities, Annuities, and Other Special Cases 98 Perpetuities 98 B Historical Examples of Perpetuities 99 Annuities 100 B COMMON MISTAKE Discounting One Too Many Times 101 Growing Cash Flows 104 4.6 Solving Problems with a Spreadsheet Program 108 4.7 Solving for Variables OtherThan Present Value or Future Value 110 Solving for the Cash Flows 111 Internal Rate of Return 113 Solving for the Number of Periods 116 B COMMON MISTAKE Excel s NPV and IRR Functions 117 8 Rule of 72 118 Summary 119 a Key Terms 120 * Further Reading 120 « Problems 121 Data Case 126 Chapter 5 Interest Rates 128 5.1 Interest Rate Quotes and Adjustments 129 The Effective Annual Rate 129 m COMMON MISTAKE Using the Wrong Discount Rate in the Annuity Formula 130 Annual Percentage Rates 131 5.2 Application: Discount Rates and Loans 133 Contents 5.3 The Determinants of Interest Rates 134 ¦ FINANCIAL CRISIS Teaser Rates and Subprime Loans 135 Inflation and Real Versus Nominal Rates 135 Investment and Interest Rate Policy 136 The Yield Curve and Discount Rates 137 ¦ INTERVIEW with Frederic S. Mishkin 139 The Yield Curve and the Economy 140 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Using the Annuity Formula When Discount Rates Vary by Maturity 140 5.4 RiskandTaxes 142 Risk and Interest Rates 143 After-Tax Interest Rates 144 5.5 The Opportunity Cost of Capital 145 Summary 146 ¦ Key Terms 147 ¦ Further Reading 147 m Problems 148 Appendix Continuous Rates and Cash Flows 153 PART III BASIC VALUATION Chapter 6 Investment Decision Rules 156 6.1 NPV and Stand-Alone Projects 157 Applying the NPV Rule 157 The NPV Profile and IRR 157 Alternative Rules Versus the NPV Rule 158 S INTERVIEW with Dick Grannis 159 6.2 The Internal Rate of Return Rule 160 Applying the IRR Rule 160 Pitfall #1: Delayed Investments 160 Pitfall #2: Multiple IRRs 161 Pitfall #3: Nonexistent IRR 163 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE IRR Versus the IRR Rule 163 6.3 The Payback Rule 164 Applying the Payback Rule 164 Payback Rule Pitfalls in Practice 165 ¦ Why Do Rules Other Than the NPV Rule Persist? 165 6.4 Choosing Between Projects 166 NPV Rule and Mutually Exclusive Investments 166 IRR Rule and Mutually Exclusive Investments 167 The Incremental IRR 168 B When Can Returns Be Compared? 170 B COMMON MISTAKE IRR and Project Financing 171 6.5 Project Selection with Resource Constraints 171 Evaluating Projects with Different Resource Requirements 171 Profitability Index 172 Shortcomings of the Profitability Index 174 Summary 174 a Key Terms 175 a Further Reading 175 ¦ Problems 175 Data Case 181 Chapter 7 Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting 182 7.1 Forecasting Earnings 183 Revenue and Cost Estimates 183 Incremental Earnings Forecast 184 Indirect Effects on Incremental Earnings 186 B COMMON MISTAKE The Opportunity Cost of an Idle Asset 187 Sunk Costs and Incremental Earnings 188 a The Sunk Cost Fallacy 188 Real-World Complexities 189 7.2 Determining Free Cash Flow and NPV 190 Calculating Free Cash Flow from Earnings 190 Calculating Free Cash Flow Directly 192 Calculating the NPV 193 7.3 Choosing Among Alternatives 194 Evaluating Manufacturing Alternatives 194 Comparing Free Cash Flows for Cisco s Alternatives 195 7.4 Further Adjustments to Free Cash Flow 195 a FINANCIAL CRISIS The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 200 7.5 Analyzing the Project 200 Break-Even Analysis 200 Sensitivity Analysis 201 B INTERVIEW with David Holland 203 Scenario Analysis 204 Summary 205 ¦ Key Terms 206 « Further Reading 206 ? Problems 206 Data Case 213 Appendix MACRS Depreciation 215 Contents Chapter 8 Valuing Bonds 217 8.1 Bond Cash Flows, Prices, andYields 218 Bond Terminology 218 Zero-Coupon Bonds 218 m FINANCIAL CRISIS Pure Discount Bonds Trading at a Premium 220 Coupon Bonds 221 8.2 Dynamic Behavior of Bond Prices 223 Discounts and Premiums 223 Time and Bond Prices 224 Interest Rate Changes and Bond Prices 226 H Clean and Dirty Prices for Coupon Bonds 227 8.3 The Yield Curve and Bond Arbitrage 229 Replicating a Coupon Bond 229 Valuing a Coupon Bond Using Zero- Coupon Yields 230 Coupon Bond Yields 231 Treasury Yield Curves 232 8.4 Corporate Bonds 233 Corporate Bond Yields 233 Bond Ratings 235 ¦ INTERVIEW with Lisa Black 236 Corporate Yield Curves 237 ¦ FINANCIAL CRISIS The Credit Crisis and Bond Yields 238 Summary 239 ¦ Key Terms 240 ? Further Reading 240 ¦ Problems 240 Data Case 245 Appendix Forward Interest Rates 247 Key Terms 250 ¦ Problems 250 Chapter 9 Valuing Stocks 251 9.1 The Dividend-Discount Model 252 A One-Year Investor 252 Dividend Yields, Capital Gains, and Total Returns 253 ¦ The Mechanics of a Short Sale 254 A Multiyear Investor 255 The Dividend-Discount Model Equation 256 9.2 Applying the Dividend-Discount Model 256 Constant Dividend Growth 256 Dividends Versus Investment and Growth 257 H John BurrWilliams Theory of Investment Value 258 Changing Growth Rates 260 ¦ INTERVIEW with Marilyn Fedak 262 Limitations of the Dividend-Discount Model 262 9.3 Total Payout and Free Cash Flow Valuation Models 263 Share Repurchases and the Total Payout Model 263 The Discounted Free Cash Flow Model 265 9.4 Valuation Based on Comparable Firms 269 Valuation Multiples 269 Limitations of Multiples 271 Comparison with Discounted Cash Flow Methods 272 Stock Valuation Techniques: The Final Word 273 9.5 Information, Competition, and Stock Prices 274 Information in Stock Prices 274 Competition and Efficient Markets 275 Lessons for Investors and Corporate Managers 278 The Efficient Markets Hypothesis Versus No Arbitrage 279 ¦ FINANCIAL CRISIS Kenneth Cole Productions?What Happened? 279 Summary 280 ¦ Key Terms 282 a Further Reading 282 m Problems 283 Data Case 288 PART IV RISK AND RETURN Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk 292 10.1 A First Look at Risk and Return 293 10.2 Common Measures of Risk and Return 295 Probability Distributions 295 Expected Return 295 Variance and Standard Deviation 296 10.3 Historical Returns of Stocks and Bonds 298 Computing Historical Returns 298 Xll Contents Average Annual Returns 300 The Variance and Volatility of Returns 301 Estimation Error: Using Past Returns to Predict the Future 303 ¦ Arithmetic Average Returns Versus Compound Annual Returns 305 10.4 The Historical Trade-Off Between Risk and Return 305 The Returns of Large Portfolios 306 The Returns of Individual Stocks 307 10.5 Common Versus Independent Risk 308 Theft Versus Earthquake Insurance: An Example 308 The Role of Diversification 309 10.6 Diversification in Stock Portfolios 311 Firm-Specific Versus Systematic Risk 311 No Arbitrage and the Risk Premium 313 ¦ FINANCIAL CRISIS Diversification Benefits During Market Crashes 314 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE A Fallacy of Long-Run Diversification 316 10.7 Measuring Systematic Risk 316 Identifying Systematic Risk: The Market Portfolio 316 Sensitivity to Systematic Risk: Beta 317 10.8 Beta and the Cost of Capital 319 Estimating the Risk Premium 319 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Beta Versus Volatility 319 ¦ INTERVIEW with Randall Lert 320 The Capital Asset Pricing Model 322 Summary 322 m Key Terms 324 ? Further Reading 324 a Problems 324 Data Case 328 Chapter 11 Optimal Portfolio Choice and the Capital Asset Pricing Model 330 11.1 The Expected Return of a Portfolio 331 11.2 The Volatility of a Two-Stock Portfolio 332 Combining Risks 332 Determining Covariance and Correlation 333 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Computing Variance, Covariance, and Correlation in Excel 335 Computing a Portfolio s Variance and Volatility 336 11.3 The Volatility of a Large Portfolio 338 Large Portfolio Variance 338 Diversification with an Equally Weighted Portfolio 339 Diversification with General Portfolios 341 11.4 Risk Versus Return: Choosing an Efficient Portfolio 341 Efficient Portfolios with Two Stocks 342 The Effect of Correlation 344 Short Sales 345 Efficient Portfolios with Many Stocks 346 ¦ NOBEL PRIZES Harry Markowitz and James Tobin 347 11.5 Risk-Free Saving and Borrowing 349 Investing in Risk-Free Securities 349 Borrowing and Buying Stocks on Margin 350 Identifying the Tangent Portfolio 351 11.6 The Efficient Portfolio and Required Returns 353 Portfolio Improvement: Beta and the Required Return 353 Expected Returns and the Efficient Portfolio 355 11.7 The Capital Asset Pricing Model 357 The CAPM Assumptions 357 Supply, Demand, and the Efficiency of the Market Portfolio 358 Optimal Investing: The Capital Market Line 358 11.8 Determining the Risk Premium 359 Market Risk and Beta 359 ¦ NOBEL PRIZE William Sharpe on the CAPM 361 The Security Market Line 362 Beta of a Portfolio 362 Summary of the Capital Asset Pricing Model 364 Summary 364 m Key Terms 367 ¦ Further Reading 367 ¦ Problems 367 Data Case 373 Appendix The CAPM with Differing Interest Rates 375 Contents Chapter 12 Estimating the Cost of Capital 377 12.1 The Equity Cost of Capital 378 12.2 The Market Portfolio 379 Constructing the Market Portfolio 379 Market Indexes 379 B Value-Weighted Portfolios and Rebalancing 380 The Market Risk Premium 381 12.3 Beta Estimation 383 Using Historical Returns 383 Identifying the Best-Fitting Line 385 Using Linear Regression 386 ffi Why Not Estimate Expected Returns Directly? 387 12.4 The Debt Cost of Capital 387 Debt Yields 387 m COMMON MISTAKE Using the Debt Yield as Its Cost of Capital 388 Debt Betas 389 12.5 A Project s Cost of Capital 390 All-Equity Comparables 390 Levered Firms as Comparables 391 The Unlevered Cost of Capital 391 Industry Asset Betas 393 12.6 Project Risk Characteristics and Financing 395 Differences in Project Risk 395 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Adjusting for Execution Risk 397 Financing and the Weighted Average Cost of Capital 397 12.7 Final Thoughts on Using the CAPM 399 ¦ INTERVIEW with Shelagh Glaser 400 Summary 401 ¦ Key Terms 402 « Further Reading 403 ¦ Problems 403 Data Case 407 Appendix Practical Considerations When Forecasting Beta 408 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Changing the Index to Improve the Fit 411 Key Terms 411 m Data Case 411 Chapter 13 Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency 412 13.1 Competition and Capital Markets 413 Identifying a Stock s Alpha 413 Profiting from Non-Zero Alpha Stocks 414 13.2 Information and Rational Expectations 415 Informed Versus Uninformed Investors 415 Rational Expectations 416 13.3 The Behavior of Individual Investors 417 Underdiversification and Portfolio Biases 417 Excessive Trading and Overconfidence 418 9 INTERVIEW with Jonathan Clements 420 Individual Behavior and Market Prices 421 13.4 SystematicTrading Biases 421 Hanging on to Losers and the Disposition Effect 421 9 NOBEL PRIZE Kahneman and Tversky s Prospect Theory 422 Investor Attention, Mood, and Experience 422 Herd Behavior 423 Implications of Behavioral Biases 423 13.5 The Efficiency of the Market Portfolio 424 Trading on News or Recommendations 424 The Performance of Fund Managers 426 The Winners and Losers 427 13.6 Style-Based Anomalies and the Market Efficiency Debate 429 Size Effects 429 Momentum 432 Implications of Positive-Alpha Trading Strategies 432 ¦ Market Efficiency and the Efficiency of the Market Portfolio 433 13.7 Multifactor Models of Risk 435 Using Factor Portfolios 435 Selecting the Portfolios 436 The Cost of Capital with Fama-French- Carhart Factor Specification 437 13.8 Methods Used in Practice 439 Contents Summary 440 * Key Terms 442 ¦ Further Reading 442 ¦ Problems 443 Appendix Building a Multifactor Model 448 PARTV CAPITAL STRUCTURE Chapter 14 Capital Structure in a Perfect Market 450 14.1 Equity Versus Debt Financing 451 Financing a Firm with Equity 451 Financing a Firm with Debt and Equity 452 The Effect of Leverage on Risk and Return 453 14.2 Modigliani-Miller I: Leverage, Arbitrage, and Firm Value 455 MM and the Law of One Price 455 Homemade Leverage 455 ¦ MM and the Real World 456 The Market Value Balance Sheet 457 Application: A Leveraged Recapitalization 458 14.3 Modigliani-Miller II: Leverage, Risk, and the Cost of Capital 460 Leverage and the Equity Cost of Capital 460 Capital Budgeting and the Weighted Average Cost of Capital 461 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Is Debt Better Than Equity? 464 Computing the WACC with Multiple Securities 464 Levered and Unlevered Betas 464 14.4 Capital Structure Fallacies 466 Leverage and Earnings per Share 466 Equity Issuances and Dilution 469 14.5 MM: Beyond the Propositions 469 « NOBEL PRIZES Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller 470 Summary 471 * Key Terms 472 « Further Reading 472 a Problems 473 Data Case 477 Chapter 15 Debt and Taxes 478 15.1 The Interest Tax Deduction 479 15.2 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 481 The Interest Tax Shield and Firm Value 481 The Interest Tax Shield with Permanent Debt 482 ¦ Pizza and Taxes 483 The Weighted Average Cost of Capital with Taxes 483 The Interest Tax Shield with a Target Debt- Equity Ratio 484 15.3 Recapitalizing to Capture theTax Shield 486 TheTax Benefit 486 The Share Repurchase 487 No Arbitrage Pricing 487 Analyzing the Recap: The Market Value Balance Sheet 488 15.4 Personal Taxes 489 Including Personal Taxes in the Interest Tax Shield 489 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield with Personal Taxes 492 Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt 493 ¦ Cutting the Dividend Tax Rate 494 15.5 Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes 494 Do Firms Prefer Debt? 494 Limits to the Tax Benefit of Debt 497 ¦ INTERVIEW with Andrew Balson 498 Growth and Debt 499 Other Tax Shields 500 The Low Leverage Puzzle 500 ¦ Employee Stock Options 502 Summary 502 ¦ Key Terms 503 ? Further Reading 503 » Problems 504 Data Case 508 Chapter 16 Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information 509 16.1 Default and Bankruptcy in a Perfect Market 510 Armin Industries: Leverage and the Risk of Default 510 Bankruptcy and Capital Structure 511 16.2 The Costs of Bankruptcy and Financial Distress 512 The Bankruptcy Code 513 Direct Costs of Bankruptcy 513 Indirect Costs of Financial Distress 514 ¦ FINANCIAL CRISIS The Chrysler Prepack 517 Contents 16.3 Financial Distress Costs and Firm Value 518 Armin Industries: The Impact of Financial Distress Costs 518 Who Pays for Financial Distress Costs? 518 16.4 Optimal Capital Structure:The Trade-OffTheory 520 The Present Value of Financial Distress Costs 520 Optimal Leverage 521 16.5 Exploiting Debt Holders:The Agency Costs of Leverage 523 Excessive Risk-Taking and Asset Substitution 523 Debt Overhang and Under-lnvestment 524 ¦ FINANCIAL CRISIS Bailouts, Distress Costs, and Debt Overhang 525 Agency Costs and the Value of Leverage 526 Debt Maturity and Covenants 527 m FINANCIAL CRISIS Moral Hazard and the Government Bailout 528 16.6 Motivating Managers:The Agency Benefits of Leverage 528 Concentration of Ownership 528 Reduction of Wasteful Investment 529 ¦ Excessive Perks and Corporate Scandals 530 Leverage and Commitment 531 16.7 Agency Costs and theTrade-Off Theory 532 The Optimal Debt Level 532 Debt Levels in Practice 533 16.8 Asymmetric Information and Capital Structure 533 Leverage as a Credible Signal 534 Issuing Equity and Adverse Selection 535 ¦ NOBEL PRIZE The 2001 Nobel Prize in Economics 536 Implications for Equity Issuance 537 Implications for Capital Structure 539 16.9 Capital Structure: The Bottom Line 541 Summary 542 ¦ Key Terms 543 ¦ Further Reading 543 ¦ Problems 544 Chapter 17 Payout Policy 551 17.1 Distributions to Shareholders 552 Dividends 552 Share Repurchases 554 17.2 Comparison of Dividends and Share Repurchases 555 Alternative Policy 1: Pay Dividend with Excess Cash 555 Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend) 556 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Repurchases and the Supply of Shares 557 Alternative Policy 3: High Dividend (Equity Issue) 558 Modigliani?Miller and Dividend Policy Irrelevance 559 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE The Bird in the Hand Fallacy 560 Dividend Policy with Perfect Capital Markets 560 17.3 TheTax Disadvantage of Dividends 560 Taxes on Dividends and Capital Gains 561 Optimal Dividend Policy with Taxes 562 17.4 Dividend Capture andTax Clienteles 564 The Effective Dividend Tax Rate 564 Tax Differences Across Investors 565 Clientele Effects 566 17.5 Payout Versus Retention of Cash 569 Retaining Cash with Perfect Capital Markets 569 Taxes and Cash Retention 570 Adjusting for Investor Taxes 571 Issuance and Distress Costs 572 Agency Costs of Retaining Cash 573 17.6 Signaling with Payout Policy 575 Dividend Smoothing 575 Dividend Signaling 576 ¦ Royal SunAlliance s Dividend Cut 577 Signaling and Share Repurchases 577 17.7 Stock Dividends, Splits, and Spin- Offs 579 Stock Dividends and Splits 579 ¦ INTERVIEW with John Connors 580 Contents ¦ Berkshire Hathaway s A B Shares 582 Spin-Offs 582 Summary 584 ¦ Key Terms 585 ¦ Further Reading 585 ¦ Problems 586 Data Case 590 PARTVI VALUATION Chapter 18 Capital Budgeting and Valuation with Leverage 594 18.1 Overview of Key Concepts 595 18.2 The Weighted Average Cost of Capital Method 596 Using the WACC to Value a Project 597 Summary of the WACC Method 598 Implementing a Constant Debt-Equity Ratio 599 18.3 The Adjusted Present Value Method 601 The Unlevered Value of the Project 601 Valuing the Interest Tax Shield 602 Summary of the APV Method 603 18.4 The Flow-to-Equity Method 604 Calculating the Free Cash Flow to Equity 605 Valuing Equity Cash Flows 606 Summary of the Flow-to-Equity Method 606 ¦ What Counts as Debt ? 607 18.5 Project-Based Costs of Capital 608 Estimating the Unlevered Cost of Capital 608 Project Leverage and the Equity Cost of Capital 609 Determining the Incremental Leverage of a Project 610 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Re-Levering the WACC 611 18.6 APV with Other Leverage Policies 612 Constant Interest Coverage Ratio 613 Predetermined Debt Levels 614 A Comparison of Methods 615 18.7 Other Effects of Financing 616 Issuance and Other Financing Costs 616 Security Mispricing 617 Financial Distress and Agency Costs 618 I FINANCIAL CRISIS Government Loan Guarantees 618 18.8 Advanced Topics in Capital Budgeting 619 Periodically Adjusted Debt 619 Leverage and the Cost of Capital 622 The WACC or FTE Method with Changing Leverage 623 Personal Taxes 625 Summary 627 ¦ Key Terms 628 ¦ Further Reading 628 h Problems 629 Data Case 635 Appendix Foundations and Further Details 637 Chapter 19 Valuation and Financial Modeling: A Case Study 641 19.1 Valuation Using Comparables 642 19.2 The Business Plan 644 Operational Improvements 644 Capital Expenditures: A Needed Expansion 645 Working Capital Management 646 Capital Structure Changes: Levering Up 646 19.3 Building the Financial Model 647 Forecasting Earnings 647 Working Capital Requirements 649 Forecasting Free Cash Flow 650 The Balance Sheet and Statement of Cash Flows (Optional) 652 19.4 Estimating the Cost of Capital 654 CAPM-Based Estimation 654 Unlevering Beta 655 Ideko s Unlevered Cost of Capital 656 19.5 Valuing the Investment 657 The Multiples Approach to Continuation Value 657 Contents The Discounted Cash Flow Approach to Continuation Value 658 APV Valuation of Ideko s Equity 660 B COMMON MISTAKE Continuation Values and Long-Run Growth 660 ¦ COMMON MISTAKE Missing Assets or Liabilities 662 A Reality Check 662 IRR and Cash Multiples 663 M INTERVIEW with Joseph L. Rice, III 664 19.6 Sensitivity Analysis 665 Summary 666 ¦ Key Terms 666 ¦ Further Reading 666 ¦ Problems 667 Appendix Compensating Management 669 Glossary G-1 Index 1-1 Credits C-1
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genre (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content
genre_facet Lehrbuch
id DE-604.BV036426764
illustrated Illustrated
indexdate 2025-02-03T17:28:01Z
institution BVB
isbn 9780132453226
9780273756033
9780132545211
0132453223
9780131372320
0131372327
language English
oai_aleph_id oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-020299446
oclc_num 608627499
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owner DE-N2
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physical XXXV, 1001, G-18, I-46, C-1 S. graph. Darst. Student access kit
publishDate 2011
publishDateSearch 2011
publishDateSort 2011
publisher Pearson
record_format marc
series2 The Prentice Hall series in finance
spellingShingle Berk, Jonathan B. 1962-
DeMarzo, Peter M.
Corporate finance
Corporations Finance
Corporate Finance (DE-588)4269795-5 gnd
Kapitalgesellschaft (DE-588)4129472-5 gnd
Finanzierung (DE-588)4017182-6 gnd
Finanzmanagement (DE-588)4139075-1 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4269795-5
(DE-588)4129472-5
(DE-588)4017182-6
(DE-588)4139075-1
(DE-588)4123623-3
title Corporate finance
title_auth Corporate finance
title_exact_search Corporate finance
title_full Corporate finance Jonathan Berk ; Peter Demarzo
title_fullStr Corporate finance Jonathan Berk ; Peter Demarzo
title_full_unstemmed Corporate finance Jonathan Berk ; Peter Demarzo
title_short Corporate finance
title_sort corporate finance
topic Corporations Finance
Corporate Finance (DE-588)4269795-5 gnd
Kapitalgesellschaft (DE-588)4129472-5 gnd
Finanzierung (DE-588)4017182-6 gnd
Finanzmanagement (DE-588)4139075-1 gnd
topic_facet Corporations Finance
Corporate Finance
Kapitalgesellschaft
Finanzierung
Finanzmanagement
Lehrbuch
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020299446&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
work_keys_str_mv AT berkjonathanb corporatefinance
AT demarzopeterm corporatefinance