|
Books > Money & Finance > Corporate finance
Valuation and Financial Forecasting is a clearly written and easy
to understand handbook intended to help readers of all skill levels
accurately forecast financial statements, analyze capital
investments, and value business enterprises. The book's approach
transcends the traditional textbook discussion of business
valuation by providing readers with deep insights into the nexus
between financial forecasting and business valuation. The book is
written with a high degree of academic rigor; yet, it is still
understandable and easy to use for both novices and experts. The
goal of this handbook is to help readers, irrespective of their
level of expertise, perform more accurate valuations and make
better informed investment-related decisions.
Public understanding of, and outcry over, the dire state of the
climate and environment is greater than ever before. Parties across
the political spectrum claim to be climate leaders, and overt
denial is on the way out. Yet when it comes to slowing the course
of the climate and nature crises, despite a growing number of
pledges, policies and summits, little ever seems to change. Nature
is being destroyed at an unprecedented rate. We remain on course
for a catastrophic 3 DegreesC of warming. What's holding us back?
In this searing and insightful critique, Adrienne Buller examines
the fatal biases that have shaped the response of our governing
institutions to climate and environmental breakdown, and asks: are
the 'solutions' being proposed really solutions? Tracing the
intricate connections between financial power, economic injustice
and ecological crisis, she exposes the myopic economism and
market-centric thinking presently undermining a future where all
life can flourish. The book examines what is wrong with mainstream
climate and environmental governance, from carbon pricing and
offset markets to 'green growth', the commodification of nature and
the growing influence of the finance industry on environmental
policy. In doing so, it exposes the self-defeating logic of a
response to these challenges based on creating new opportunities
for profit, and a refusal to grapple with the inequalities and
injustices that have created them. Both honest and optimistic, The
Value of a Whale asks us - in the face of crisis - what we really
value. This book is relevant to United Nations Sustainable
Development Goal 11, Sustainable cities and communities -- .
The advancement in FinTech especially artificial intelligence (AI)
and machine learning (ML), has significantly affected the way
financial services are offered and adopted today. Important
financial decisions such as investment decision making,
macroeconomic analysis, and credit evaluation are getting more
complex in the field of finance. ML is used in many financial
companies which are making a significant impact on financial
services. With the increasing complexity of financial transaction
processes, ML can reduce operational costs through process
automation which can automate repetitive tasks and increase
productivity. Among others, ML can analyze large volumes of
historical data and make better trading decisions to increase
revenue. This book provides an exhaustive overview of the roles of
AI and ML algorithms in financial sectors with special reference to
complex financial applications such as financial risk management in
a big data environment. In addition, it provides a collection of
high-quality research works that address broad challenges in both
theoretical and application aspects of AI in the field of finance.
FinTech has revolutionized the way financial services are delivered
and consumed in the modern world and the use of central bank
digital currencies is gaining traction. With these new
advancements, further study is required to ensure they are utilized
appropriately and reach their full potential. Exploring the Dark
Side of FinTech and Implications of Monetary Policy examines recent
advancements in central bank digital currency and many FinTech
applications and discusses FinTech trends, possibilities, and
challenges as well as different moral, ethical, and social issues.
Covering key topics such as digital economy, monetary policy, and
sustainability, this reference work is ideal for managers, industry
professionals, business owners, entrepreneurs, policymakers,
researchers, scholars, practitioners, instructors, and students.
Brealey, Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 11e, is an introduction
to corporate finance focusing on how companies invest in real
assets, how they raise the money to pay for the investments, and
how those assets ultimately affect the firm's value. It also
provides a broad overview of the financial landscape. The book
offers a framework for systematically thinking about most of the
important financial problems that both firms and individuals are
likely to confront: financial management is important, interesting,
and challenging. Fundamentals focuses on setting out the basic
principles of financial management and applying them to the main
decisions faced by the financial manager. The text is also
organized around the key concepts of modern finance. These
concepts, properly explained, simplify the subject. They are also
practical. Financial management tools are easier to grasp and use
effectively when presented in a consistent conceptual framework.
This book is a good collection of state-of-the-art approaches to
financial engineering. It will be especially useful to new
researchers and practitioners working in this field and will help
them to quickly grasp the current state of financial engineering.
The book equips the readers with comprehensive understanding of
technological issues and financial innovations in environmental and
social matters. It will allow the readers to use new econometric
and operational methods to examine certain innovative products.
Finally, it proposes new operational solutions based on a framework
of analysis that has not yet been explored, so that the dialogue
between financial engineering professionals and company managers
may be more efficient, effective and impactful.
As the COVID-19 pandemic comes to a close, inflation has revealed
itself to be a major problem for all countries of the developed
world. The problem has been exacerbated in developing nations,
which had problems even before the pandemic. Energy prices have
increased, and with the increase in transportation costs, it has
been more difficult for many retailers to stock shelves as they did
before the pandemic. It is understood by many that the rising
prices and supply chain disruptions will likely not be temporary
and must be managed by future executives. Managing Inflation and
Supply Chain Disruptions in the Global Economy uncovers the many
ways businesses can manage this new phenomenon. It discusses global
crises and their effects on the global economy in terms of
inflation and supply chain. Covering topics such as inflationist
impact, crisis leadership, and deglobalization, this premier
reference source is an essential resource for economists, supply
chain specialists, government officials, consultants, business
leaders and executives, logistics professionals, IT managers,
students and educators of higher education, researchers, and
academicians.
This print textbook is available for students to rent for their
classes. The Pearson print rental program provides students with
affordable access to learning materials, so they come to class
ready to succeed. For introductory courses in managerial finance.
Using 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 - weaves
pedagogy into concepts and practice, giving students a roadmap to
follow through the text and supplementary tools. The 16th 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.
For centuries, Swiss banks have served the globe's wealthiest
individuals, employing a strict culture of anonymity and gaining
massive wealth in the process. But when Credit Suisse collapsed, the
veil of secrecy came down and the world was suddenly privy to the
corruption, scandal and empty hubris that keep our biggest banks alive.
It was a 166-year-old bastion of Swiss banking, amongst the most
important and influential financial institutions in the world – but a
veneer of high-class service disguised a darker, dirtier reality. From
its sterile Zurich headquarters, the bank catered to a clientele that
included dictators, drug dealers and former Nazi officers, and helped
fleece its own clients out of billions of dollars. This continued for
decades, even as Credit Suisse continued to expand, acquiring smaller
banks and granting its own executives lucrative bonus contracts.
Meltdown is the story of how the house of cards fell apart. Bloomberg
investigative journalist and bestselling author of Pyramid of Lies
Duncan Mavin takes readers inside the bank’s hushed marble corridors,
detailing its secretive culture and the series of increasingly selfish
decisions, made by a handful of men at the top, which ultimately led to
disaster.
This is the fascinating history of one of the biggest financial
institutions of our times - and a thrilling exposé of the wider
financial services sector - which promises to give readers a shocking
and brutally honest look into a previously-unknown world of greed, lies
and unrelenting human ambition.
Familiarise yourself with the core concepts surrounding Corporate
Finance with this reader-friendly text. Corporate Finance:
Principles and Practice, 8th Edition by Denzil Watson and Antony
Head, is a comprehensive guide to the field, introducing you to the
key topics and basic areas of Corporate Finance. This thoroughly
updated edition is ideal for students in accounting, business, or
finance-related studies at undergraduate, postgraduate, and
professional levels. Written and structured in a reader-friendly
style for those new to the subject, the book explains clearly and
step-by-step the essential principles and mathematical techniques
needed without burdening you with unnecessary detail. The questions
for review and discussion throughout the book and the comprehensive
references with further reading suggestions at the end of the text,
aim to support self-study and help you develop critical thinking
skills. The eighth edition is fully updated with new and improved
questions and refreshed chapter vignettes, offering a deeper
understanding of the topics introduced. This edition is also
updated with the latest changes in regulations and taxation,
ensuring your learning is in line with the most recent developments
in the field. The text also includes numerous examples to help you
connect the theoretical information with practical knowledge and
understand how corporate finance principles work in action. Learn
everything you need to know about the essential concepts in
Corporate Finance with this market-leading text and get a glimpse
of the tools and techniques that managers use in the real world to
achieve corporate goals in the business environment. MyLab Finance
is not included. Students, if MyLab (R) Finance is a
recommended/mandatory component of the course, please ask your
instructor for the correct ISBN and course ID. MyLab Finance should
only be purchased when required by an instructor. Instructors,
contact your Pearson representative for more information
This incisive book presents a critical evaluation of fintech, the
use of technology to provide financial services. While fintech has
been hailed as a game changer and a disruptor, Imad Moosa
illustrates critical similarities between the present popularity of
fintech and the dot-com hype of the early 2000s. Presenting a
detailed account of the growth of the technology used in the
provision of financial services, the book offers an expansive
introduction to the fintech industry as it exists and functions in
the 21st century. Moosa advances an in-depth assessment of the
costs and benefits of financial technologies, debunking popular
myths, highlighting the risks that necessitate regulation, and
examining fintech-related fraud. In investigating the propaganda
used to justify the 'war on cash' and glorify cryptocurrencies, the
book considers whether fintech is an evolution or a revolution,
ultimately characterising fintech as a transitory hype. Utilising
empirical data and topical case studies to underpin its analysis of
fintech, this timely book will be an invaluable resource for
academics interested in financial technology. Its investigation
into proliferating regulatory problems brought about by the
emergence of small firms will also prove beneficial to politicians
and policymakers.
Working capital refers to the money that a company uses to finance
its daily operations. Proper management of working capital is
critical to financial health and operational success. Working
capital management (WCM) aims to maximize operational efficiency by
maintaining a delicate balance among growth, profitability, and
liquidity. WCM is a continuous responsibility focusing on a firm's
day-to-day operations involving short-term assets and liabilities.
By efficiently managing a firm's cash, accounts receivable,
inventories, and accounts payable, managers can help maintain
smooth operations and improve a company's earnings and
profitability. By contrast, poor WCM could lead to a lower credit
score, financial insolvency, legal troubles, liquidation of assets,
and potential bankruptcy.This book provides an objective look into
the dynamic world of WCM. Its coverage extends from discussing
basic concepts and their applications to increasingly complex and
real-world situations. The book stresses that WCM is a combination
of both art and science. This volume spans the gamut from
theoretical to practical while offering the right balance of
detailed and user-friendly coverage. Readers can gain an in-depth
understanding of this subject from experts in this field. Those who
want a broad survey will benefit, as will readers looking for more
in-depth presentations of specific areas within this field of
study. In summary, Working Capital Management: Concepts and
Strategies provides a fresh look at this intriguing but often
complex subject of WCM.
This thought-provoking book introduces a financial economics
perspective to the topic of eco-innovations and, more generally,
sociotechnical transitions. It develops a model that illustrates
how financial constraints can prevent the development of
eco-innovations within companies and hinder the transition process
towards a more sustainable regime. Edgardo Sica presents a review
of the state of the art, as well as new data from original surveys
aimed at testing the impact of financial constraints on
eco-innovative decisions at radical and niche levels. He proposes a
definitive conceptualisation of eco-innovations while stressing the
relevance of the environmental performance of innovations, rather
than the environmental motivation of the innovators. Through the
use of a unique multilevel perspective model, the book critically
analyses the extent to which financial constraints can hinder
eco-innovative decisions, thereby crucially filling a gap in the
current literature on eco-innovations. Firms, Finance and
Sustainable Transitions will prove a stimulating read for
academics, researchers and experts within the fields of
eco-innovations, sustainable development, financial and
environmental economics, and green finance.
New trends are emerging regarding earnings management and corporate
governance showing similarities and striking differences in the
practices of different countries and economies. These new trends
currently shape the field of modern corporate governance with
crucial issues being looked at in governance law and practices,
accounting systems, earnings quality and management, stakeholder
involvement, and more. In order to advance these new avenues in
corporate governance, research looks at accounting policies firms
use in different opportunistic circumstances in order to manage
earnings, the corporate governance practices in different
countries, firm performance, and other dimensions of companies. The
understanding of these topics is beneficial in understanding the
current state of different types of firms and their practices in
modern times. Comparative Research on Earnings Management,
Corporate Governance, and Economic Value is focused on the
investigation of key challenges and perspectives of corporate
governance and earnings management and outlines possible scenarios
of its development. The chapters explore this new avenue of
research and cover theoretical, empirical, and experimental studies
related to different themes in the global context of earnings
management and corporate governance. This book is ideal for
economists, businesses, managers, accountants, practitioners,
stakeholders, researchers, academicians, and students who are
interested in the current issues and advancements in corporate
governance and earnings management.
Environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) risk
considers the nonfinancial risks that could arise in a business,
such as sustainability, brand reputation, legal aspects, ethics,
and more. As businesses all have their own risk profiles, there is
a need for risk management and mitigation that is unique for each
company. Because of this variability, the study on ESG risk factors
and motives of incorporating the ESG perspective into business
models are crucial yet challenging. Therefore, it is important to
understand how companies are adapting and mitigating ESG risk in
diverse types of businesses. Adapting and Mitigating Environmental,
Social, and Governance Risk in Business examines processes in
enterprises that can increase the sustainability of business models
and their coherence with the assumptions of the concept of
sustainable development and ESG risk. Furthermore, the book
explores how enterprises operating in different sectors are
adapting their business models towards sustainability in order to
create sustainable value. This book is a valuable tool for
managers, executives, entrepreneurs, practitioners, academicians,
researchers, and graduate students in finance, business, and
management.
This book deals with risk capital provided for established firms
outside the stock market, private equity, which has grown rapidly
over the last three decades, yet is largely poorly understood.
Although it has often been criticized in the public mind as being
short termist and having adverse consequences for employment, in
reality this is far from the case. Here, John Gilligan and Mike
Wright dispel some of the biggest myths and misconceptions about
private equity. The book provides a unique and authoritative source
from a leading practitioner and academic for practitioners,
policymakers, and researchers that explains in detail what private
equity involves and reviews systematic evidence of what the impact
of private equity has been. Written in a highly accessible style,
the book takes the reader through what private equity means, the
different actors involved, and issues concerning sourcing, checking
out, valuing, and structuring deals. The various themes from the
systematic academic evidence are highlighted in numerous summary
vignettes placed alongside the text that discuss the practical
aspects. The main part of the work concludes with an up-to-date
discussion by the authors, informed commentators on the key issues
in the lively debate about private equity. The book further
contains summary tables of the academic research carried out over
the past three decades across the private equity landscape
including: the returns to investors, economic performance, impact
on R&D and employees, and the longevity and life-cycle of
private equity backed deals.
|
You may like...
Dirt Town
Hayley Scrivenor
Paperback
R340
R308
Discovery Miles 3 080
|