|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The way in which leverage and its expected dynamics impact on firm
valuation is very different from what is assumed by the traditional
static capital structure framework. Recent work that allows the
firm to restructure its debt over time proves to be able to explain
much of the observed cross-sectional and time-series variation in
leverage, while static capital structure predictions do not. The
purpose of this book is to re-characterize the firm's valuation
process within a dynamical capital structure environment, by
drawing on a vast body of recent and more traditional theoretical
insights and empirical findings on firm evaluation, also including
asset pricing literature, offering a new setting in which
practitioners and researchers are provided with new tools to
anticipate changes in capital structure and setting prices for
firm's debt and equity accordingly.
The way in which leverage and its expected dynamics impact on firm
valuation is very different from what is assumed by the traditional
static capital structure framework. Recent work that allows the
firm to restructure its debt over time proves to be able to explain
much of the observed cross-sectional and time-series variation in
leverage, while static capital structure predictions do not. The
purpose of this book is to re-characterize the firm's valuation
process within a dynamical capital structure environment, by
drawing on a vast body of recent and more traditional theoretical
insights and empirical findings on firm evaluation, also including
asset pricing literature, offering a new setting in which
practitioners and researchers are provided with new tools to
anticipate changes in capital structure and setting prices for
firm's debt and equity accordingly.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.