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Books > Money & Finance > Corporate finance
'The Research Handbook of Finance and Sustainability is highly
recommended to faculty and students of graduate business schools
and researchers. It is recommended for purchase by academic
libraries supporting advanced degrees in business administration.'
- American Reference Books Annual Sustainability is now an
essential objective for all organizations, enabling them to resist
adverse shocks and thrive in a disruptive world. This Research
Handbook provides expert coverage and practical tips on a wide
array of pertinent issues related to current finance and
sustainability research. Comprising 31 chapters written by over 60
eminent experts, this Research Handbook provides readers with the
latest ideas and propositions regarding finance and sustainability.
This includes the significance of corporate social responsibility,
environmental and entrepreneurial finance, crowdsourcing,
governance and fraud. Despite ethical business practices and
corporate social responsibility rules being adopted in various
countries, the contributors demonstrate that further efforts are
needed to motivate and empower actors to integrate ethical behavior
into all business and managerial decisions. Multidisciplinary in
reach, this comprehensive Research Handbook features
forward-thinking academic and professional literature on corporate
social responsibility, sustainability and finance for post-graduate
students, researchers and practitioners to explore the forthcoming
paths for research. Contributors: D. AL-Ghamdi, Y. Alperovych, S.
Bajic, W. Ben-Amar, R. Bianchini, B. Bolton, S. Boubaker, H.
Bystroem, R. Calcagno, D. Coldwell, J. Creedy, D. Cumming, P.
Desrochers, A. Florio, S. Gatti, P. Geiler, G. Gianfrate, G.
Gokcek, J. Hazelton, H. Hoang, S. Kim, D. Lee, Z. (Frank) Li, H.
Liang, C. Lopez-Gutierrez, K. Maas, S. Marsat, P. McIlkenny, K.
Mhedhbi, I. Moosa, A. Ng, D.K. Nguyen, H. Nguyen Anh Pham, C.
Niehaus, T.M. Nisar, M. Nurul Houqe, M. Pagano, P. Perego, S.
Perkiss, G. Pijourlet, S. Pope, G. Prabhakar, E. Queinnec, V.
Ramiah, A. Reberioux, L. Renneboog, Z. Rezaee, G. Roudaut, S. Ryu,
I. Sainz-Fernandez, M. Scarlata, C. Schellhorn, G. Sinclair, J.A.F.
Stoner, L. Strakova, B. Torre-Olmo, T. van Zijl, E. Velayutham, J.
Walske, F.M. Werner, B. Williams, T. Yang, B.B. Yurtoglu, A.
Zacharakis, Z. Zuraida
The ongoing digital transformation is shaping the Islamic mode of
financial intermediation and the impact on the faith-based
financial mode has been multifaceted. This has raised a host of
interesting questions: what is the degree of penetration of Islamic
finance in the fintech industry? Are Islamic financial institutions
(IFIs) or banks ready to embrace fintech? Is fintech an enabler or
barrier to achieve the intended purpose of Islamic finance? Will
technology narrow the division between Islamic and conventional
finance in the future? These are existential questions for Islamic
finance and the book endeavors to examine the impact of financial
technology on the industry. The book assesses various fintech
business models and how they could be a threat or an opportunity.
It also examines whether fintech provides IFIs an edge to serve
clients following the Shariah norms and how the adoption of fintech
in the Islamic mode is required for meeting the maqasid Al Shariah.
The book discusses applicability of fintech like blockchain,
digital currency, big data, and AI to different branches of Islamic
finance. This book will interest students, analysts, policymakers,
and regulators who are working on Islamic finance, financial
economics, Islamic economics, and development finance.
For introductory courses in managerial finance. Help students apply
financial concepts to solve real world problems with a proven
teaching and learning framework The Teaching and Learning System --
a hallmark feature of Principles of Managerial Finance, Brief --
weaves pedagogy into concepts and practice, giving students a
roadmap to follow through the text and supplementary tools. The 8th
Edition, Global Edition, concentrates on the material students need
to know in order to make effective financial decisions in an
increasingly competitive business environment. It allows students
to make the connections between a firm's action and its value, as
determined in the financial market. With a generous amount of
examples, this text is an easily accessible resource for in- and
out-of-class learning.
Throughout recent decades, corporate and financial social
responsibility has steadily become recognized worldwide in the wake
of globalization and political trends. These factors, as well as
the current state of the world economy, have leveraged a demand for
implementing responsibility into market systems. Studying the
emergence of social responsibility will allow businesses to address
future economies that align profit maximization with a concern for
societal well-being and environmental sustainability. Corporate
Social Responsibility and Opportunities for Sustainable Financial
Success provides innovative insights into the historical,
socio-psychological, cognitive, political, and economic processes
that impact social responsibility within corporate and financial
markets. The content within this publication highlights topics such
as global governance, financial social responsibility, and
political divestiture. It is a vital reference source for
researchers, business owners, managers, graduate students,
scholars, policy makers, economists, environmental professionals,
and academicians seeking coverage on topics centered on innovative
ways in which corporations and financial markets can create
sustainable value for society to improve the living conditions for
this generation and the following.
The control of corporations is a subject that will appeal to a broad readership. How are the giant corporations that affect our lives controlled? Which individuals and institutions command the vast proportion of economic resources controlled by corporations? How do patterns of corporate control differ across European countries? This book answers these questions by providing a detailed analysis of corporate control in nine European countries - Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
'Packed with insights and details that will both amaze and appal
you' - Oliver Bullough, author of Butler to the World Across the
world, HSBC likes to sell itself as 'the world's local bank', the
friendly face of corporate and personal finance. And yet, a decade
ago, the same bank was hit with a record US fine of $1.9 billion
for facilitating money laundering for 'drug kingpins and rogue
nations'. In pursuit of their goal of becoming the biggest bank in
the world, between 2003 to 2010, HSBC allowed El Chapo and the
Sinaloa cartel, one of the most notorious and murderous criminal
organizations in the world, to turn its ill-gotten money into clean
dollars and thereby grow one of the deadliest drugs empires the
world has ever seen. How did a bank, which boasts 'we're committed
to helping protect the world's financial system on which millions
of people depend, by only doing business with customers who meet
our high standards of transparency' come to facilitate Mexico's
richest drug baron? And how did a bank that had been named 'one of
the best-run organizations in the world' become so entwined with
one of the most barbaric groups of gangsters on the planet? Too Big
to Jail is an extraordinary story brilliantly told by writer,
commentator, and former editor of The Independent, Chris
Blackhurst, that starts in Hong Kong and ranges across London,
Washington, the Cayman Islands and Mexico, where HSBC saw the
opportunity to become the largest bank in the world, and El Chapo
seized the chance to fuel his murderous empire by laundering his
drug proceeds through the bank. It brings together an extraordinary
cast of politicians, bankers, drug dealers, FBI officers and
whistle-blowers, and asks what price does greed have? Whose job is
it to police global finance? And why did not a single person go to
prison for facilitating the murderous expansion of a global drug
empire?
On 5 December 2017 the Steinhoff group was still worth R199 billion. Twenty four hours
later more than R160 billion of this fortune was wiped out. The Steinhoff Empire which
took 20 years to build into an international business giant, had crumbled overnight.
Markus Jooste, Steinhoff’s flashy CEO, resigned via SMS and has since been fleeing
an avalanche of scandals and accusations: luxury homes for a blonde mistress,
allegations of fraud, racing horses and unparalleled extravagance, a lavish, black
Jaguar for an old university residence...
What exactly happened here? Who knew what? What is Steinhoff, who is Markus
Jooste and what does it all have to do with the so called Stellenbosch mafia? Where
does business tycoon Christo Wiese, Shoprite and Pepkor fit in and where is the
pensioners’ money?
Well-known financial writer James-Brent Styan unpacks these and other questions in
this astounding tale of power and greed, of secrets and deceit, and ultimately the
biggest financial breakdown in the history of South Africa.
Through interviews with trustworthy sources, revelations from confidential documents
and in-depth research about Steinhoff’s history, Styan uncovers what the group doesn’t
want you to know.
Follow the Money: The story of Steinhoff, Markus Jooste and the Stellenbosch Boys is a
gripping financial thriller that will be told as cautionary tale or salacious scandal in both
boardrooms and living rooms for decades to come.
'A rollercoaster read that reveals everything that's wrong with our
financial system' Catherine Belton, author of Putin's People 'The
financial investigation of the decade... Money Men instantly enters
the canon of great financial crime books' Bradley Hope, author of
The Billion Dollar Whale 'A rip-roaring ride into the underworld of
the global economy' Tom Burgis, author of Kleptopia This is the
stranger-than-fiction story of Wirecard, once a $30 billion tech
darling, now a smouldering wreck, by the journalist who brought it
crashing down - perfect for those who loved Bad Blood and Empire of
Pain. When journalist Dan McCrum followed a tip to investigate the
hot new tech company challenging Silicon Valley, everything about
Wirecard looked a little too good to be true: offices were
sprouting up around the world, it was reporting runaway growth and
the CEO even wore a black turtleneck in tribute to Steve Jobs. In
the space of a few short years, the company had come from nowhere
to overtake industry giants like Commerzbank and Deutsche Bank on
the stock market. As McCrum dug deeper, he encountered a story
stranger and more dangerous than he ever imagined: a world of short
sellers and whistleblowers, pornographers and private militias,
hackers and spies. Before long he realised that he wasn't the only
one in pursuit. Shadowy figures were following him through the
streets of London, high-flying lawyers were sending ominous letters
to his boss, and he was named as the prime suspect in a criminal
inquiry. The race was on to prove his suspicions and clear his
name. Money Men is the astonishing true story of Wirecard's
multi-billion-dollar fraud, Europe's biggest new tech darling
revealed as a house of cards. Uncovering fake bank accounts, fake
offices and possibly even a fake death, McCrum offers a searing
exposé that will finally lay bare the truth. Now adapted as the
Netflix documentary Skandal! 'Required reading' The Economist 'A
cross between the Enron scandal and Rosemary's Baby' John
Lanchester, London Review of Books 'Reads like a crime drama' New
Statesman 'The culmination of years of careful investigative
work... Gripping' Evening Standard 'A thrilling, head-spinning
book' Irish Times
Japan has always been an "odd man out" from the standpoint of
Western norm or Western finance. It is a country that is as
developed as any in the West. However, it is also a country that
possesses the significant institutional and cultural traits that
separate it from the West. An important question in finance is to
what extent the basic models of finance, developed with the Western
"perfect market" view in mind, can be applied to Japan; or
conversely, what critical adjustments must be made to make models
amendable to the reality of Japanese finance. This book contains 21
substantive papers that address various aspects of Japanese
finance. This is an attempt to bring them together under the same
cover so that the commonality and peculiarity of Japanese finance
can be more easily discerned across different applications as well
as compared across countries. Hence, despite apparent differences
in topics, the theme is international and comparative in nature
throughout.
Financial risk management has become increasingly important in the
last years and a profound understanding of this subject is vital
for managers, practitioners, investors and students of finance and
related areas. This book provides the major trends regarding
research on financial risk management, as well as the practices of
different countries and economies. It is a compilation of the state
of the art, new trends, and theoretical and empirical studies on
the domain of enterprise risk. It is a critical reference source
that discusses the financial instruments firms use to manage the
different kind of financial risks, such as interest rate risk,
corporate risk, credit risk, liquidity, and default risk. This book
focuses on international risk management practices, and its
relationship to firms' performance, and other dimensions of
companies. It will present research on topics such as several types
of financial risk, management of risk, hedging strategies,
corporate governance and risk management, and behavioral finance
and risk, and more. It is ideal for regulatory authorities,
accountants, managers, academics, students, and researchers seeking
coverage on the theoretical, empirical, and experimental studies
that relate to the different themes in these global subjects.
Dividends are not only a signal about a firm's prospects under
asymmetric information, but they can also act as a corporate
governance device to align the management's interests with those of
the shareholders. Dividend Policy and Corporate Governance is the
first comprehensive volume on the relationship between dividend
policy and corporate governance, and examines in detail empirical
studies and current theories. Reviewing the interactions between
dividend policy and other corporate governance mechanisms, it
compares results for the UK and the US with those for other
countries such as France, Germany, and Japan, and provides new
empirical evidence on corporate governance in continental Europe
and its impact on dividends. Focusing on one of the main
representatives of this system, Germany, it highlights major
differences between the dividend policies of German firms and those
of UK or US firms. Conventional wisdom states that German dividends
are lower than UK or US dividends, yet on a published-profits
basis, the exact converse is true. In addition, the authors
demonstrate a link between corporate control structures and
dividend payouts, report evidence that the existence of a loss is
an additional determinant of dividend changes, and demonstrate that
the tax status of the controlling shareholder and the firm's
dividend payout are not linked. The conclusions reached in this
book have important implications for the current debate on
corporate governance, making it invaluable for academics, finance
professionals, regulators and legal advisors.
For courses in corporate finance or financial management at the
undergraduate and graduate level. Excel Modeling in Corporate
Finance approaches building and estimating models with Microsoft(r)
Excel(r). Students are shown the steps involved in building models,
rather than already-completed spreadsheets.
"The relationship between finance and strategy is important
and...this text makes it a central theme...and should make the
subject much more relevant." Graham Diggle, Oxford Brookes
University "This text is well written, clear and easy to follow...
and innovative in that it provides a link between corporate finance
and financial strategy." Shishir Malde, Nottingham Trent University
What are the core principles of corporate finance and their links
with financial strategy? What are the tools and techniques of
financial decision-making necessary to solve real-life business
problems? How in practice are financial strategies implemented that
are appropriate to businesses at each stage of their life cycle?
Corporate Finance and Financial Strategy answers these and many
more questions. This textbook introduces contemporary financial
issues and topics of growing importance such as Islamic finance,
corporate governance, and behavioural finance, and discusses
reasons for and implications of the current global financial
crisis. Along with its accompanying resources, this text is a must
for corporate finance and financial strategy undergraduates and
postgraduates, MBAs, and those undertaking professional examination
courses.
As an ever-growing international business, Islamic banking has
changed the face of economics in recent years. As more and more
industries embrace Islamic principles, the industry will
unquestionably influence modern economic practices and techniques
across the globe. The Handbook of Research on International Islamic
Banking is a collection of innovative research on the methods and
applications of Islamic banking interests on a global economic
scale. While highlighting topics including asset diversification,
profit sharing, and financial reporting, this book is ideally
designed for bankers, banking analysts, international business
managers, financiers, industry professionals, economists,
government officials, academicians, students, and researchers
seeking current research on Islamic banking perspectives and
approaches to finances.
This primer succinctly summarises key theoretical concepts in
fiscal choice for both practitioners and scholars. The author
contends that fiscal choice is ultimately a choice of both politics
and economics. The book first introduces budget institutions and
processes at various levels of government, which restrict budget
decision makers' discretion. It also explains budget decision
makers' efforts to make rational resource allocations. It then
shows how and why such efforts are stymied by the decision makers'
capacity and institutional settings. The book's unique benefit is
its emphasis on all the essential topics, with short, module-type
chapters which can be read in any order.
First published in 1981, this edited collection reviews the
operations of state-owned enterprises, examining the actual
performance of such organisations in the advanced industrialised
countries. The authors consider the regularities and
characteristics of state-owned enterprises, in particular the
persistent efforts of managers to increase their autonomy and
escape from the oversight of government agencies and the public.
Chapters consider principles of finance and decision-making in
these organisations and provide a truly international perspective
with case studies in Italy, France and Britain. This is a timely
reissue in context of the current economic climate, which will be
of great value to students and academics with an interest in the
nationalisation of companies, international business and the
relationship between governments and managers.
Due to the mortgage crisis of 2008, laws aimed at achieving
budgetary and financial stability were enacted. The concept of
financial sustainability has been linked to the need of rendering
public services without compromising the ability to do so in the
future. Financial Sustainability and Intergenerational Equity in
Local Governments is a critical scholarly resource that analyzes
the financial sustainability of local governments with the aim of
ensuring equality and intergenerational equity. Featuring coverage
on a broad range of topics such as intergenerational equity, public
policies, and sustainability management, this book is geared
towards government officials, managers, academicians,
practitioners, students, and researchers seeking current research
on identifying public policies to ensure financial balance.
This book explains what the internationalization of banking and
finance means, and examines its extent and the reasons it has
developed. The advantages and disadvantages of the new
situation-and what is yet to come-are neatly sketched, along with
the policy problems for national governments and international
bodies.
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