Fundamentals of corporate finance

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Hauptverfasser: Ross, Stephen A. 1944-2017 (VerfasserIn), Westerfield, Randolph (VerfasserIn), Jordan, Bradford D. (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: New York, NY McGraw-Hill/Irwin 2016
Ausgabe:11. ed.
Schriftenreihe:The McGraw-Hill/Irwin series in finance, insurance and real estate
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adam_text Brief Contents PART 1 Overview of Corporate Finance CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE FINANCE 1 CHAPTER 2 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, TAXES, AND CASH FLOW 20 PART 2 Financial Statements and Long-Term Financial Planning CHAPTER 3 WORKING WITH FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 49 CHAPTER 4 LONG-TERM FINANCIAL PLANNING AND GROWTH 91 PART 3 Valuation of Future Cash Flows CHAPTER 5 INTRODUCTION TO VALUATION: THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY 124 CHAPTER 6 DISCOUNTED CASH FLOW VALUATION 149 CHAPTER 7 INTEREST RATES AND BOND VALUATION 195 CHAPTER 8 STOCK VALUATION 239 PART 4 Capital Budgeting CHAPTER 9 NET PRESENT VALUE AND OTHER INVESTMENT CRITERIA 272 CHAPTER 10 MAKING CAPITAL INVESTMENT DECISIONS 312 CHAPTER 11 PROJECT ANALYSIS AND EVALUATION 350 PART 5 Risk and Return CHAPTER 12 SOME LESSONS FROM CAPITAL MARKET HISTORY 382 CHAPTER 13 RETURN, RISK, AND THE SECURITY MARKET LINE 420 PART 6 Cost of Capital and Long-Term Financial Policy CHAPTER 14 COST OF CAPITAL 458 CHAPTER 15 CHAPTER 16 CHAPTER 17 RAISING CAPITAL 495 FINANCIAL LEVERAGE AND CAPITAL STRUCTURE POLICY 534 DIVIDENDS AND PAYOUT POLICY 574 xxxi XXXII BRIEF CONTENTS CHAPTER 18 SHORT-TERM FINANCE AND PLANNING 606 CHAPTER 19 CASH AND LIQUIDITY MANAGEMENT 640 CHAPTER 20 CREDIT AND INVENTORY MANAGEMENT 673 CHAPTER 21 INTERNATIONAL CORPORATE FINANCE 711 CHAPTER 22 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE: IMPLICATIONS FOR FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT CHAPTER 23 ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT 763 CHAPTER 24 OPTIONS AND CORPORATE FINANCE 790 CHAPTER 25 OPTION VALUATION 829 CHAPTER 26 MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS 862 CHAPTER 27 LEASING 893 Contents PART 1 Overview of Corporate Finance CHAPTER 1 CHAPTER 2 INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE FINANCE 1 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, TAXES, 1.1 Corporate Finance and the Financial Manager 2 AND CASH FLOW 20 What Is Corporate Finance? 2 2.1 The Balance Sheet 21 The Financial Manager 2 Assets: The Left Side 21 Financial Management Decisions 2 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity: The Right Side 21 Capital Budgeting 2 Net Working Capital 22 Capital Structure 3 Liquidity 23 Working Capital Management 4 Debt versus Equity 24 Conclusion 4 Market Value versus Book Value 24 1.2 Forms of Business Organization 4 2.2 The Income Statement 25 Sole Proprietorship 4 GAAP and the Income Statement 26 Partnership 5 Noncash Items 27 Corporation 5 Time and Costs 27 A Corporation by Another Name ... 7 2.3 Taxes 29 1.3 The Goal of Financial Management 7 Corporate Tax Rates 29 Possible Goals 8 Average versus Marginal Tax Rates 30 The Goal of Financial Management 8 2.4 Cash Flow 32 A More General Goal 9 Cash Flow from Assets 32 Sarbanes-Oxley 9 Operating Cash Flow 33 1.4 The Agency Problem and Control of the Capital Spending 33 Corporation 10 Change in Net Working Capital 34 Agency Relationships 10 Conclusion 34 Management Goals 10 A Note about Free Cash Flow 34 Do Managers Act in the Stockholders’ Interests? 11 Cash Flow to Creditors and Stockholders 35 Managerial Compensation 11 Cash Flow to Creditors 35 Control of the Firm 12 Cash Flow to Stockholders 35 Conclusion 12 An Example: Cash Flows for Dole Cola 37 Stakeholders 12 Operating Cash Flow 37 1.5 Financial Markets and the Corporation 13 Net Capital Spending 37 Cash Flows to and from the Firm 14 Change in NWC and Cash Flow from Assets 38 Primary versus Secondary Markets 14 Cash Flow to Stockholders and Creditors 38 Primary Markets 14 Secondary Markets 15 Dealer versus Auction Markets 15 Trading in Corporate Securities 15 Listing 16 1.6 Summary and Conclusions 16 2.5 Summary and Conclusions 39 PART 2 Financial Statements and Long-Term Financial Planning CHAPTER 3 WORKING WITH FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 49 3.1 Cash Flow and Financial Statements: A Closer Look 50 Sources and Uses of Cash 50 The Statement of Cash Flows 52 3.2 Standardized Financial Statements 54 Common-Size Statements 54 Common-Size Balance Sheets 54 Common-Size income Statements 55 Common-Size Statements of Cash Flows 56 XXXill xxxiv CONTENTS Common-Base Year Financial Statements: Trend Analysis 56 Combined Common-Size and Base Year Analysis 56 3.3 Ratio Analysis 57 Short-Term Solvency, or Liquidity, Measures 58 Current Ratio 58 The Quick (or Acid-Test) Ratio 59 Other Liquidity Ratios 60 Long-Term Solvency Measures 60 Total Debt Ratio 60 A Brief Digression: Total Capitalization versus Total Assets 61 Times interest Earned 61 Cash Coverage 62 Asset Management, or Turnover, Measures 62 Inventory Turnover and Days Sales in Inventory 62 Receivables Turnover and Days’ Sales in Receivables 63 Asset Turnover Ratios 64 Profitability Measures 64 Profit Margin 65 Return on Assets 65 Return on Equity 65 Market Value Measures 66 Price-Earnings Ratio 66 Price-Sales Ratio 66 Market-to֊Book Ratio 67 Enterprise Value-EBITDA Ratio 67 Conclusion 68 3.4 The DuPont Identity 69 A Closer Look at Roe 69 An Expanded Dupont Analysis 71 3.5 Using Financial Statement Information 73 Why Evaluate Financial Statements? 73 Internal Uses 73 External Uses 73 Choosing a Benchmark 74 Time Trend Analysis 74 Peer Group Analysis 74 Problems with Financial Statement Analysis 78 3.6 Summary and Conclusions 80 CHAPTER 4 LONG-TERM FINANCIAL PLANNING AND GROWTH 91 4.1 What Is Financial Planning? 93 Growth as a Financial Management Goal 93 Dimensions of Financial Planning 93 What Can Planning Accomplish? 94 Examining Interactions 94 Exploring Options 94 Avoiding Surprises 94 Ensuring Feasibility and Internal Consistency 95 Conclusion 95 4.2 Financial Planning Models: A First Look 95 A Financial Planning Model: The Ingredients 95 Sales Forecast 96 Pro Forma Statements 96 Asset Requirements 96 Financial Requirements 96 The Plug 96 Economic Assumptions 97 A Simple Financial Planning Model 97 4.3 The Percentage of Sales Approach 98 The Income Statement 98 The Balance Sheet 99 A Particular Scenario 101 An Alternative Scenario 102 4.4 External Financing and Growth 105 EFN and Growth 105 Financial Policy and Growth 107 The Internal Growth Rate 107 The Sustainable Growth Rate 108 Determinants of Growth 109 A Note about Sustainable Growth Rate Calculations 111 4.5 Some Caveats Regarding Financial Planning Models 112 4.6 Summary and Conclusions 113 PART 3 Valuation of Future Cash Flows CHAPTER 5 INTRODUCTION TO VALUATION: THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY 124 5.1 Future Value and Compounding 125 Investing for a Single Period 125 Investing for More Than One Period 125 A Note about Compound Growth 131 5.2 Present Value and Discounting 132 The Single-Period Case 132 Present Values for Multiple Periods 133 5.3 More about Present and Future Values 136 Present versus Future Value 136 Determining the Discount Rate 137 Finding the Number of Periods 140 5.4 Summary and Conclusions 144 CONTENTS XXXV CHAPTER 6 DISCOUNTED CASH FLOW VALUATION 149 6.1 Future and Present Values of Multiple Cash Flows 150 Future Value with Multiple Cash Flows 150 Present Value with Multiple Cash Flows 153 A Note about Cash Flow Timing 156 6.2 Valuing Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities 157 Present Value for Annuity Cash Flows 157 Annuity Tables 158 Finding the Payment 160 Finding the Rate 161 Future Value for Annuities 163 A Note about Annuities Due 164 Perpetuities 165 Growing Annuities and Perpetuities 167 6.3 Comparing Rates: The Effect of Compounding 167 Effective Annual Rates and Compounding 168 Calculating and Comparing Effective Annual Rates 168 EARS and APRS 170 Taking It to the Limit: A Note about Continuous Compounding 172 6.4 Loan Types and Loan Amortization 173 Pure Discount Loans 173 Interest-Only Loans 174 Amortized Loans 174 6.5 Summary and Conclusions 179 CHAPTER 7 INTEREST RATES AND BOND VALUATION 195 7.1 Bonds and Bond Valuation 196 Bond Features and Prices 196 Bond Values and Yields 196 Interest Rate Risk 200 Finding the Yield to Maturity: More Trial and Error 201 7.2 More about Bond Features 206 Is It Debt or Equity? 206 Long-Term Debt: The Basics 206 The Indenture 208 Terms of a Bond 208 Security 209 Seniority 209 Repayment 209 The Call Provision 210 Pro tective Covenants 210 7.3 Bond Ratings 211 7.4 Some Different Types of Bonds 212 Government Bonds 212 Zero Coupon Bonds 213 Floating-Rate Bonds 214 Other Types of Bonds 215 Sukuk 216 7.5 Bond Markets 218 How Bonds are Bought and Sold 220 Bond Price Reporting 220 A Note about Bond Price Quotes 223 7.6 Inflation and Interest Rates 223 Real versus Nominal Rates 223 The Fisher Effect 224 Inflation and Present Values 225 7.7 Determinants of Bond Yields 226 The Term Structure of Interest Rates 226 Bond Yields and the Yield Curve: Putting It All Together 229 Conclusion 230 7.8 Summary and Conclusions 230 CHAPTER 8 STOCK VALUATION 239 8.1 Common Stock Valuation 240 Cash Flows 240 Some Special Cases 242 Zero Growth 242 Constant Growth 242 Nonconstant Growth 245 Two-Stage Growth 247 Components of the Required Return 248 Stock Valuation Using Multiples 249 8.2 Some Features of Common and Preferred Stocks 251 Common Stock Features 251 Shareholder Rights 251 Proxy Voting 252 Classes of Stock 252 Other Rights 253 Dividends 253 Preferred Stock Features 254 Stated Value 254 Cumulative and Noncumulative Dividends 254 Is Preferred Stock Really Debt? 254 8.3 The Stock Markets 255 Dealers and Brokers 255 Organization of the NYSE 256 Members 256 Operations 257 Floor Activity 257 NASDAQ Operations 258 ECNs 260 Stock Market Reporting 260 8.4 Summary and Conclusions 262 xxxvi CONTENTS PART 4 Capital Budgeting CHAPTER 9 NET PRESENT VALUE AND OTHER INVESTMENT CRITERIA 272 9.1 Net Present Value 273 The Basic Idea 273 Estimating Net Present Value 274 9.2 The Payback Rule 277 Defining the Rule 277 Analyzing the Rule 279 Redeeming Qualities of the Rule 279 Summary of the Rule 280 9.3 The Discounted Payback 281 9.4 The Average Accounting Return 283 9.5 The Internal Rate of Return 285 Problems with The IRR 289 Nonconventional Cash Flows 289 Mutually Exclusive Investments 291 Investing or Financing? 293 Redeeming Qualities of the IRR 294 The Modified Internal Rate of Return (MIRR) 295 Method # 1: The Discounting Approach 295 Method #2: The Reinvestment Approach 295 Method #3; The Combination Approach 296 MIRR or IRR: Which Is Better? 296 9.6 The Profitability Index 296 9.7 The Practice of Capital Budgeting 297 9.8 Summary and Conclusions 300 CHAPTER 10 MAKING CAPITAL INVESTMENT DECISIONS 312 10.1 Project Cash Flows: A First Look 313 Relevant Cash Flows 313 The Stand-Alone Principle 313 10.2 Incremental Cash Flows 314 Sunk Costs 314 Opportunity Costs 314 Side Effects 315 Net Working Capital 315 Financing Costs 315 Other Issues 316 10.3 Pro Forma Financial Statements and Project Cash Flows 316 Getting Started: Pro Forma Financial Statements 316 Project Cash Flows 317 Project Operating Cash Flow 317 Project Net Working Capital and Capital Spending 318 Projected Total Cash Flow and Value 318 10.4 More about Project Cash Flow 319 A Closer Look at Net Working Capital 319 Depreciation 322 Modified ACRS Depreciation (MACRS) 322 Book Value versus Market Value 323 An Example: The Majestic Mulch and Compost Company (MMCC) 325 Operating Cash Flows 325 Change in NWC 326 Capital Spending 328 Total Cash Flow and Value 328 Conclusion 328 10.5 Alternative Definitions of Operating Cash Flow 329 The Bottom-Up Approach 330 The Top-Down Approach 330 The Tax Shield Approach 330 Conclusion 331 10.6 Some Special Cases of Discounted Cash Flow Analysis 331 Evaluating Cost-Cutting Proposals 331 Setting the Bid Price 333 Evaluating Equipment Options with Different Lives 335 10.7 Summary and Conclusions 337 CHAPTER 11 PROJECT ANALYSIS AND EVALUATION 350 11.1 Evaluating NPV Estimates 351 The Basic Problem 351 Projected versus Actual Cash Flows 351 Forecasting Risk 351 Sources of Value 352 11.2 Scenario and Other What-lf Analyses 353 Getting Started 353 Scenario Analysis 354 Sensitivity Analysis 356 Simulation Analysis 357 11.3 Break-Even Analysis 358 Fixed and Variable Costs 358 Variable Costs 358 Fixed Costs 360 Total Costs 360 Accounting Break-Even 361 Accounting Break-Even: A Closer Look 363 Uses for the Accounting Break-Even 363 11.4 Operating Cash Flow, Sales Volume, and Break-Even 364 Accounting Break-Even and Cash Flow 364 The Base Case 364 CONTENTS xxxvii Calculating the Break-Even Level 365 Payback and Break-Even 365 Sales Volume and Operating Cash Flow 366 Cash Flow, Accounting, and Financial Break-Even Points 366 Accounting Break-Even Revisited 367 Cash Break-Even 367 Financial Break-Even 367 Conclusion 368 11.5 Operating Leverage 369 The Basic Idea 369 Implications of Operating Leverage 369 Measuring Operating Leverage 369 Operating Leverage and Break-Even 371 11.6 Capital Rationing 372 Soft Rationing 372 Hard Rationing 372 11.7 Summary and Conclusions 373 PART 5 Risk and Return CHAPTER 12 SOME LESSONS FROM CAPITAL MARKET HISTORY 382 12.1 Returns 383 Dollar Returns 383 Percentage Returns 385 12.2 The Historical Record 387 A First Look 387 A Closer Look 389 12.3 Average Returns: The First Lesson 393 Calculating Average Returns 393 Average Returns: The Historical Record 393 Risk Premiums 393 The First Lesson 394 12.4 The Variability of Returns: The Second Lesson 395 Frequency Distributions and Variability 395 The Historical Variance and Standard Deviation 396 The Historical Record 397 Normal Distribution 399 The Second Lesson 400 2008: The Bear Growled and Investors Howled 400 Using Capital Market History 402 More on the Stock Market Risk Premium 402 12.5 More about Average Returns 404 Arithmetic versus Geometric Averages 404 Calculating Geometric Average Returns 404 Arithmetic Average Return or Geometric Average Return? 407 12.6 Capital Market Efficiency 408 Price Behavior in an Efficient Market 408 The Efficient Markets Hypothesis 409 Some Common Misconceptions about the EMH 410 The Forms of Market Efficiency 411 12.7 Summary and Conclusions 412 CHAPTER 13 RETURN, RISK, AND THE SECURITY MARKET LINE 420 13.1 Expected Returns and Variances 421 Expected Return 421 Calculating the Variance 423 13.2 Portfolios 424 Portfolio Weights 425 Portfolio Expected Returns 425 Portfolio Variance 426 13.3 Announcements, Surprises, and Expected Returns 428 Expected and Unexpected Returns 428 Announcements and News 428 13.4 Risk: Systematic and Unsystematic 430 Systematic and Unsystematic Risk 430 Systematic and Unsystematic Components of Return 430 13.5 Diversification and Portfolio Risk 431 The Effect of Diversification: Another Lesson from Market History 431 The Principle of Diversification 432 Diversification and Unsystematic Risk 433 Diversification and Systematic Risk 434 13.6 Systematic Risk and Beta 434 The Systematic Risk Principle 435 Measuring Systematic Risk 435 Portfolio Betas 437 13.7 The Security Market Line 438 Beta and the Risk Premium 438 The Reward-to-Risk Ratio 439 The Basic Argument 440 The Fundamental Result 442 The Security Market Line 443 Market Portfolios 443 The Capital Asset Pricing Model 443 13.8 The SML and the Cost of Capital: A Preview 446 The Basic Idea 446 The Cost of Capital 446 13.9 Summary and Conclusions 447 xxxviii CONTENTS PART 6 Cost of Capital and Long-Term Financial Policy CHAPTER 14 COST OF CAPITAL 458 14.1 The Cost of Capital: Some Preliminaries 459 Required Return versus Cost of Capital 459 Financial Policy and Cost of Capital 460 14.2 The Cost of Equity 460 The Dividend Growth Model Approach 460 Implementing the Approach 461 Estimating G 461 Advantages and Disadvantages of the Approach 462 The SML Approach 462 Implementing the Approach 463 Advantages and Disadvantages of the Approach 463 14.3 The Costs of Debt and Preferred Stock 464 The Cost of Debt 464 The Cost of Preferred Stock 465 14.4 The Weighted Average Cost of Capital 466 The Capital Structure Weights 466 Taxes and the Weighted Average Cost of Capital 467 Calculating the WACC for Eastman Chemical 468 Eastman s Cost of Equity 468 Eastman s Cost of Debt 4 70 Eastman’s WACC 471 Solving the Warehouse Problem and Similar Capital Budgeting Problems 472 Performance Evaluation: Another Use of the WACC 475 14.5 Divisional and Project Costs of Capital 476 The SML and the WACC 476 Divisional Cost of Capital 477 The Pure Play Approach 477 The Subjective Approach 4 78 14.6 Company Valuation With The WACC 4 79 14.7 Flotation Costs and the Average Cost of Capital 482 The Basic Approach 482 Flotation Costs and NPV 483 Internal Equity and Flotation Costs 485 14.8 Summary and Conclusions 485 CHAPTER 15 RAISING CAPITAL 495 15.1 The Financing Life Cycle of a Firm: Early-Stage Financing and Venture Capital 496 Venture Capital 496 Some Venture Capital Realities 497 Choosing a Venture Capitalist 497 Conclusion 497 15.2 Selling Securities to the Public: The Basic Procedure 498 Crowdfunding 499 15.3 Alternative Issue Methods 499 15.4 Underwriters 507 Choosing an Underwriter 502 Types of Underwriting 502 Firm Commitment Underwriting 502 Best Efforts Unden/vriting 503 Dutch Auction Underwriting 503 The Aftermarket 503 The Green Shoe Provision 504 Lockup Agreements 504 The Quiet Period 504 15.5 IPOs and Underpricing 505 IPO Underpricing: The 1999-2000 Experience 505 Evidence on Underpricing 507 Why Does Underpricing Exist? 510 15.6 New Equity Sales and the Value of the Firm 57 7 15.7 The Costs of Issuing Securities 512 The Costs of Selling Stock to the Public 512 The Costs of Going Public: A Case Study 515 15.8 Rights 517 The Mechanics of a Rights Offering 57 7 Number of Rights Needed to Purchase a Share 578 The Value of a Right 579 Ex Rights 520 The Underwriting Arrangements 522 Effects on Shareholders 522 15.9 Dilution 523 Dilution of Proportionate Ownership 523 Dilution of Value: Book versus Market Values 523 A Misconception 524 The Correct Arguments 524 15.10 Issuing Long-Term Debt 525 15.11 Shelf Registration 526 15.12 Summary and Conclusions 527 CHAPTER 16 FINANCIAL LEVERAGE AND CAPITAL STRUCTURE POLICY 534 16.1 The Capital Structure Question 535 Firm Value and Stock Value: An Example 535 Capital Structure and the Cost of Capital 536 16.2 The Effect of Financial Leverage 537 The Basics of Financial Leverage 537 Financial Leverage, EPS, and ROE: An Example 537 EPS versus EBIT 538 Corporate Borrowing and Homemade Leverage 540 CONTENTS XXXIX 16.3 Capital Structure and the Cost of Equity Capital 541 M M Proposition I: The Pie Model 541 The Cost of Equity and Financial Leverage: M M Proposition II 542 Business and Financial Risk 544 16.4 M M Propositions I and II with Corporate Taxes 545 The Interest Tax Shield 546 Taxes and M M Proposition I 546 Taxes, the WACC, and Proposition II 547 Conclusion 548 16.5 Bankruptcy Costs 550 Direct Bankruptcy Costs 551 Indirect Bankruptcy Costs 551 16.6 Optimal Capital Structure 552 The Static Theory of Capital Structure 552 Optimal Capital Structure and the Cost of Capital 553 Optimal Capital Structure: A Recap 554 Capital Structure: Some Managerial Recommendations 556 Taxes 556 Financial Distress 556 16.7 The Pie Again 556 The Extended Pie Model 557 Marketed Claims versus Nonmarketed Claims 558 16.8 The Pecking-Order Theory 558 Internal Financing and the Pecking Order 558 Implications of the Pecking Order 559 16.9 Observed Capital Structures 560 16.10 A Quick Look at the Bankruptcy Process 562 Liquidation and Reorganization 562 Bankruptcy Liquidation 562 Bankruptcy Reorganization 563 Financial Management and the Bankruptcy Process 565 Agreements to Avoid Bankruptcy 565 16.11 Summary and Conclusions 566 CHAPTER 17 DIVIDENDS AND PAYOUT POLICY 574 17.1 Cash Dividends and Dividend Payment 575 Cash Dividends 575 Standard Method of Cash Dividend Payment 575 Dividend Payment: A Chronology 576 More about the Ex-Dividend Date 576 17.2 Does Dividend Policy Matter? 578 An Illustration of the Irrelevance of Dividend Policy 578 Current Policy: Dividends Set Equal to Cash Flow 579 Alternative Policy: Initial Dividend Greater Than Cash Flow 579 Homemade Dividends 579 A Test 580 17.3 Real-World Factors Favoring a Low Dividend Payout 581 Taxes 581 Flotation Costs 581 Dividend Restrictions 581 17.4 Real-World Factors Favoring a High Dividend Payout 582 Desire for Current Income 582 Tax and Other Benefits from High Dividends 583 Corporate Investors 583 Tax-Exempt Investors 583 Conclusion 583 17.5 A Resolution of Real-World Factors? 583 Information Content of Dividends 584 The Clientele Effect 585 17.6 Stock Repurchases: An Alternative to Cash Dividends 585 Cash Dividends versus Repurchase 587 Real-World Considerations in a Repurchase 588 Share Repurchase and EPS 589 17.7 What We Know and Do Not Know about Dividend and Payout Policies 589 Dividends and Dividend Payers 589 Corporations Smooth Dividends 592 Putting It All Together 592 Some Survey Evidence on Dividends 594 17.8 Stock Dividends and Stock Splits 596 Some Details about Stock Splits and Stock Dividends 596 Example of a Small Stock Dividend 596 Example of a Stock Split 597 Example of a Large Stock Dividend 597 Value of Stock Splits and Stock Dividends 597 The Benchmark Case 597 Popular Trading Range 598 Reverse Splits 598 17.9 Summary and Conclusions 599 xl CONTENTS PART 7 Short-Term Financial Planning and Management CHAPTER 18 SHORT-TERM FINANCE AND PLANNING 606 18.1 Tracing Cash and Net Working Capital 607 18.2 The Operating Cycle and the Cash Cycle 608 Defining the Operating and Cash Cycles 609 The Operating Cycle 609 The Cash Cycle 609 The Operating Cycle and the Firm s Organizational Chart 611 Calculating the Operating and Cash Cycles 611 The Operating Cycle 612 The Cash Cycle 613 Interpreting the Cash Cycle 614 18.3 Some Aspects of Short-Term Financial Policy 614 The Size of the Firm’s Investment in Current Assets 615 Alternative Financing Policies for Current Assets 616 An Ideal Case 616 Different Policies for Financing Current Assets 616 Which Financing Policy Is Best? 619 Current Assets and Liabilities in Practice 620 18.4 The Cash Budget 621 Sales and Cash Collections 621 Cash Outflows 622 The Cash Balance 622 18.5 Short-Term Borrowing 623 Unsecured Loans 624 Compensating Balances 624 Cost of a Compensating Balance 624 Letters of Credit 625 Secured Loans 625 Accounts Receivable Financing 625 Inventory Loans 626 Other Sources 626 18.6 A Short-Term Financial Plan 627 18.7 Summary and Conclusions 628 CHAPTER 19 CASH AND LIQUIDITY MANAGEMENT 640 19.1 Reasons for Holding Cash 641 The Speculative and Precautionary Motives 641 The Transaction Motive 641 Compensating Balances 641 Costs of Holding Cash 641 Cash Management versus Liquidity Management 642 19.2 Understanding Float 642 Disbursement Float 642 Collection Float and Net Float 643 Float Management 644 Measuring Float 644 Some Details 645 Cost of the Float 645 Ethical and Legal Questions 64 7 Electronic Data Interchange and Check 21: The End of Float? 648 19.3 Cash Collection and Concentration 649 Components of Collection Time 649 Cash Collection 649 Lockboxes 649 Cash Concentration 651 Accelerating Collections: An Example 652 19.4 Managing Cash Disbursements 653 Increasing Disbursement Float 653 Controlling Disbursements 654 Zero-Balance Accounts 654 Controlled Disbursement Accounts 655 19.5 Investing Idle Cash 655 Temporary Cash Surpluses 655 Seasonal or Cyclical Activities 655 Planned or Possible Expenditures 655 Characteristics of Short-Term Securities 656 Maturity 656 Default Risk 656 Marketability 656 Taxes 656 Some Different Types of Money Market Securities 657 19.6 Summary and Conclusions 658 19A Determining the Target Cash Balance 662 The Basic Idea 663 The Bat Model 664 The Opportunity Costs 665 The Trading Costs 665 The Total Cost 666 The Solution 666 Conclusion 667 The Miller-Orr Model: A More General Approach 668 The Basic Idea 668 Using the Model 668 Implications of the BAT and Miller-Orr Models 669 Other Factors Influencing the Target Cash Balance 670 CHAPTER 20 CREDIT AND INVENTORY MANAGEMENT 673 20.1 Credit and Receivables 674 Components of Credit Policy 674 The Cash Flows from Granting Credit 674 The Investment in Receivables 675 CONTENTS Xli 20.2 Terms of the Sale 675 The Basic Form 676 The Credit Period 676 The Invoice Date 676 Length of the Credit Period 676 Cash Discounts 677 Cost of the Credit 678 Trade Discounts 678 The Cash Discount and the ACP 678 Credit Instruments 679 20.3 Analyzing Credit Policy 679 Credit Policy Effects 679 Evaluating a Proposed Credit Policy 680 NPV of Switching Policies 680 A Break-Even Application 682 20.4 Optimal Credit Policy 682 The Total Credit Cost Curve 682 Organizing the Credit Function 683 20.5 Credit Analysis 684 When Should Credit Be Granted? 684 A One-Time Sale 684 Repeat Business 685 Credit Information 686 Credit Evaluation and Scoring 686 20.6 Collection Policy 687 Monitoring Receivables 687 Collection Effort 688 20.7 Inventory Management 688 The Financial Manager and Inventory Policy 688 Inventory Types 689 Inventory Costs 689 20.8 Inventory Management Techniques 690 The ABC Approach 690 The Economic Order Quantity Model 690 Inventory Depletion 692 The Carrying Costs 692 The Restocking Costs 692 The Total Costs 693 Extensions to the EOQ Model 695 Safety Stocks 695 Reorder Points 695 Managing Derived-Demand Inventories 695 Materials Requirements Planning 695 Just-in-Time Inventory 697 20.9 Summary and Conclusions 697 20A More about Credit Policy Analysis 704 Two Alternative Approaches 704 The One-Shot Approach 704 The Accounts Receivable Approach 704 Discounts and Default Risk 706 NPV of the Credit Decision 706 A Break-Even Application 707 PART 8 Topics in Corporate Finance CHAPTER 21 INTERNATIONAL CORPORATE FINANCE 711 21.1 Terminology 712 21.2 Foreign Exchange Markets and Exchange Rates 713 Exchange Rates 714 Exchange Rate Quotations 715 Cross-Rates and Triangle Arbitrage 715 Types of Transactions 717 21.3 Purchasing Power Parity 718 Absolute Purchasing Power Parity 718 Relative Purchasing Power Parity 720 The Basic Idea 720 The Result 720 Currency Appreciation and Depreciation 721 21.4 Interest Rate Parity, Unbiased Forward Rates, and the International Fisher Effect 722 Covered Interest Arbitrage 722 Interest Rate Parity 723 Forward Rates and Future Spot Rates 724 Putting It All Together 724 Uncovered Interest Parity 725 The International Fisher Effect 725 21.5 international Capital Budgeting 726 Method 1 : The Home Currency Approach 726 Method 2: The Foreign Currency Approach 727 Unremitted Cash Flows 728 21.6 Exchange Rate Risk 728 Short-Run Exposure 728 Long-Run Exposure 729 Translation Exposure 730 Managing Exchange Rate Risk 731 21.7 Political Risk 731 21.8 Summary and Conclusions 732 CHAPTER 22 BEHAVIORAL FINANCE: IMPLICATIONS FOR FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 740 22.1 Introduction to Behavioral Finance 741 22.2 Biases 741 Overconfidence 741 Overoptimism 742 Confirmation Bias 742 CONTENTS xlii 22.3 Framing Effects 743 Loss Aversion 743 House Money 744 22.4 Heuristics 746 The Affect Heuristic 746 The Representativeness Heuristic 747 Representativeness and Randomness 747 The Gambler’s Fallacy 748 22.5 Behavioral Finance and Market Efficiency 749 Limits to Arbitrage 750 The 3Com/Palm Mispricing 750 The Royal Dutch/Shell Price Ratio 751 Bubbles and Crashes 752 The Crash of 1929 752 The Crash of October 1987 753 The Nikkei Crash 755 The “Dot-Com” Bubble and Crash 755 22.6 Market Efficiency and the Performance of Professional Money Managers 757 22.7 Summary and Conclusions 760 CHAPTER 23 ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT 763 23.1 Insurance 764 23.2 Managing Financial Risk 765 The Risk Profile 766 Reducing Risk Exposure 766 Hedging Short-Run Exposure 768 Cash Flow Hedging: A Cautionary Note 768 Hedging Long-Term Exposure 768 Conclusion 769 23.3 Hedging with Forward Contracts 769 Forward Contracts: The Basics 769 The Payoff Profile 770 Hedging with Forwards 770 A Caveat 771 Credit Risk 772 Forward Contracts in Practice 772 23.4 Hedging with Futures Contracts 772 Trading in Futures 772 Futures Exchanges 773 Hedging with Futures 773 23.5 Hedging with Swap Contracts 775 Currency Swaps 775 Interest Rate Swaps 776 Commodity Swaps 776 The Swap Dealer 776 Interest Rate Swaps: An Example 777 23.6 Hedging with Option Contracts 778 Option Terminology 778 Options versus Forwards 778 Option Payoff Profiles 778 Option Hedging 779 Hedging Commodity Price Risk with Options 780 Hedging Exchange Rate Risk with Options 782 Hedging Interest Rate Risk with Options 782 A Preliminary Note 782 Interest Rate Caps 782 Other Interest Rate Options 782 Actual Use of Derivatives 783 23.7 Summary and Conclusions 784 CHAPTER 24 OPTIONS AND CORPORATE FINANCE 790 24.1 Options: The Basics 791 Puts and Calls 791 Stock Option Quotations 792 Option Payoffs 794 24.2 Fundamentals of Option Valuation 796 Value of a Call Option at Expiration 797 The Upper and Lower Bounds on a Call Option’s Value 797 The Upper Bound 797 The Lower Bound 798 A Simple Model: Part I 799 The Basic Approach 799 A More Complicated Case 800 Four Factors Determining Option Values 801 24.3 Valuing a Call Option 801 A Simple Model: Part II 801 The Fifth Factor 803 A Closer Look 803 24.4 Employee Stock Options 804 ESO Features 805 ESO Repricing 805 ESO Backdating 806 24.5 Equity as a Call Option on the Firm’s Assets 807 Case I: The Debt Is Risk-Free 807 Case II: The Debt Is Risky 808 24.6 Options and Capital Budgeting 809 The Investment Timing Decision 810 Managerial Options 811 Contingency Planning 812 Options in Capital Budgeting: An Example 813 Strategic Options 814 Conclusion 814 24.7 Options and Corporate Securities 814 Warrants 815 The Difference between Warrants and Call Options 815 Earnings Dilution 815 Convertible Bonds 816 Features of a Convertible Bond 816 Value of a Convertible Bond 816 Other Options 818 The Call Provision on a Bond 818 Put Bonds 818 Insurance and Loan Guarantees 819 24.8 Summary and Conclusions 820 CONTENTS xliii CHAPTER 25 OPTION VALUATION 829 25.1 Put-Call Parity 830 Protective Puts 830 An Alternative Strategy 831 The Result 831 Continuous Compounding: A Refresher Course 832 25.2 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model 835 The Call Option Pricing Formula 835 Put Option Valuation 838 A Cautionary Note 839 25.3 More about Black-Scholes 840 Varying the Stock Price 840 Varying the Time to Expiration 843 Varying the Standard Deviation 844 Varying the Risk-Free Rate 845 Implied Standard Deviations 846 25.4 Valuation of Equity and Debt in a Leveraged Firm 848 Valuing the Equity in a Leveraged Firm 848 Options and the Valuation of Risky Bonds 849 25.5 Options and Corporate Decisions: Some Applications 851 Mergers and Diversification 851 Options and Capital Budgeting 852 25.6 Summary and Conclusions 854 Lower Taxes 872 Net Operating Losses 872 Unused Debt Capacity 872 Surplus Funds 872 Asset Write-Ups 873 Reductions in Capital Needs 873 Avoiding Mistakes 874 A Note about Inefficient Management 874 26.5 Some Financial Side Effects of Acquisitions 875 EPS Growth 875 Diversification 876 26.6 The Cost of an Acquisition 876 Case I: Cash Acquisition 877 Case 11: Stock Acquisition 8 77 Cash versus Common Stock 878 26.7 Defensive Tactics 879 The Corporate Charter 879 Repurchase and Standstill Agreements 879 Poison Pills and Share Rights Plans 880 Going Private and Leveraged Buyouts 881 Other Devices and Jargon of Corporate Takeovers 881 26.8 Some Evidence on Acquisitions: Does M A Pay? 882 26.9 Divestitures and Restructurings 883 26.10 Summary and Conclusions 884 CHAPTER 26 MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS 862 26.1 The Legal Forms of Acquisitions 863 Merger or Consolidation 863 Acquisition of Stock 864 Acquisition of Assets 864 Acquisition Classifications 865 A Note about Takeovers 865 Alternatives to Merger 866 26.2 Taxes and Acquisitions 888 Determinants of Tax Status 888 Taxable versus Tax-Free Acquisitions 867 26.3 Accounting for Acquisitions 867 The Purchase Method 887 More about Goodwill 888 26.4 Gains from Acquisitions 869 Synergy 869 Revenue Enhancement 870 Marketing Gains 870 Strategic Benefits 870 Market Power 871 Cost Reductions 871 Economies of Scale 871 Economies of Vertical integration 871 Complementary Resources 872 CHAPTER 27 LEASING 893 27.1 Leases and Lease Types 894 Leasing versus Buying 894 Operating Leases 895 Financial Leases 895 Tax-Oriented Leases 896 Leveraged Leases 896 Sale and Leaseback Agreements 896 27.2 Accounting and Leasing 896 27.3 Taxes, the IRS, and Leases 898 27.4 The Cash Flows from Leasing 899 The Incremental Cash Flows 899 A Note about Taxes 900 27.5 Lease or Buy? 901 A Preliminary Analysis 901 Three Potential Pitfalls 901 NPV Analysis 902 A Misconception 902 27.6 A Leasing Paradox 904 27.7 Reasons for Leasing 905 Good Reasons for Leasing 905 Tax Advantages 905 A Reduction of Uncertainty 906 Lower Transactions Costs 907 Fewer Restrictions and Security Requirements 90 7 xliv CONTENTS Dubious Reasons for Leasing 907 Leasing and Accounting income 907 100 Percent Financing 907 Low Cost 908 Other Reasons for Leasing 908 27.8 Summary and Conclusions 908 APPENDIX A MATHEMATICAL TABLES A-1 APPENDIX C ANSWERS TO SELECTED END-OF-CHAPTER PROBLEMS C-l APPENDIX D USING THE HP 10B AND Tl BA II PLUS FINANCIAL CALCULATORS D-1 INDEX 1-1 APPENDIX B KEY EQUATIONS B-1
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spelling Ross, Stephen A. 1944-2017 Verfasser (DE-588)128781408 aut
Fundamentals of corporate finance Stephen A. Ross, Randolph W. Westerfield, Bradford D. Jordan
11. ed.
New York, NY McGraw-Hill/Irwin 2016
XLIV, 913 S., [43] S. in getr. Zählung. Ill., graph. Darst. 26 cm
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The McGraw-Hill/Irwin series in finance, insurance and real estate
Includes index.
Corporations Finance
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spellingShingle Ross, Stephen A. 1944-2017
Westerfield, Randolph
Jordan, Bradford D.
Fundamentals of corporate finance
Corporations Finance
Finanzierung (DE-588)4017182-6 gnd
Corporate Finance (DE-588)4269795-5 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4017182-6
(DE-588)4269795-5
(DE-588)4151278-9
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title Fundamentals of corporate finance
title_auth Fundamentals of corporate finance
title_exact_search Fundamentals of corporate finance
title_full Fundamentals of corporate finance Stephen A. Ross, Randolph W. Westerfield, Bradford D. Jordan
title_fullStr Fundamentals of corporate finance Stephen A. Ross, Randolph W. Westerfield, Bradford D. Jordan
title_full_unstemmed Fundamentals of corporate finance Stephen A. Ross, Randolph W. Westerfield, Bradford D. Jordan
title_short Fundamentals of corporate finance
title_sort fundamentals of corporate finance
topic Corporations Finance
Finanzierung (DE-588)4017182-6 gnd
Corporate Finance (DE-588)4269795-5 gnd
topic_facet Corporations Finance
Finanzierung
Corporate Finance
Einführung
Lehrbuch
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