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An essential guide to valuation techniques and financial analysis With the collapse of the economy and financial systems, many institutions are reevaluating what they are willing to spend money on. Project valuation is key to both cost effectiveness measures and shareholder value. The purpose of this book is to provide a comprehensive examination of critical capital budgeting topics. Coverage extends from discussing basic concepts, principles, and techniques to their application to increasingly complex, real-world situations. Throughout, the book emphasizes how financially sound capital budgeting facilitates the process of value creation and discusses why various theories make sense and how ...
Explains how faculty members can improve their teaching methods or how accounting units can improve their curricula/programs.
First Published in 1997. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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Praise for Project Financing, First Edition "Owing to his teaching as a finance professor and as an experienced investment banker, John Finnerty brings to his book, Project Financing, an insightful perspective, blending the theoretical with the practical." —Zoltan Merszei, former chairman, president, and CEO, The Dow Chemical Company "Finnerty has managed to distill the complexities of project financing with its myriad components and variations. Clear, practical, and in-depth, Project Financing is a valuable user's guide for project sponsors, regulators, host governments (local and foreign), and financiers alike." —Ricardo M. Campoy, Director, Kilgore Minerals Ltd. "Project Financing war...
Behavioral finance presented in this book is the second-generation of behavioral finance. The first generation, starting in the early 1980s, largely accepted standard finance’s notion of people’s wants as “rational” wants—restricted to the utilitarian benefits of high returns and low risk. That first generation commonly described people as “irrational”—succumbing to cognitive and emotional errors and misled on their way to their rational wants. The second generation describes people as normal. It begins by acknowledging the full range of people’s normal wants and their benefits—utilitarian, expressive, and emotional—distinguishes normal wants from errors, and offers guidance on using shortcuts and avoiding errors on the way to satisfying normal wants. People’s normal wants include financial security, nurturing children and families, gaining high social status, and staying true to values. People’s normal wants, even more than their cognitive and emotional shortcuts and errors, underlie answers to important questions of finance, including saving and spending, portfolio construction, asset pricing, and market efficiency.
For almost thirty years, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity (BPEA) has provided academic and business economists, government officials, and members of the financial and business communities with timely research of current economic issues. Contents Include: Articles BART VAN ARK and DIRK PILAT Productivity Levels in Germany, Japan, and the United States: Differences and Causes MARTIN NEIL BAILY Competition, Regulation, and Efficiency in Service Industries ROBERT Z. LAWRENCE and MATTHEW J. SLAUGHTER International Trade and American Wages in the 1980s: Giant Sucking Sound or Small Hiccup? RICHARD E. CAVES and MATTHEW B. KREPPS Fat: The Displacement of Nonproduction Workers from U.S. Manufacturing Industries BRONWYN H. HALL Industrial Research During the 1980s: Did the Rate of Return Fall? PAUL M. ROMER Implementing a National Technology Strategy with Self-Organizing Investment Boards
This publication is a description of an alternative instrument to the capital contribution in kind. This is an analysis of the contribution in kind to the company Owners’ Equity in the Italian s.r.l. (limited liability company) without prejudice to the credit rating and fiscal benefits guaranteed by capital contribution. It comes to the conclusion that it is possible to have a contribution in kind to the company Owners’ Equity in the s.r.l., without the statuary auditor estimation, with no alteration of credit rating and fiscal benefits of the company. Capital is nowadays deprived of its economic meaning, remaining, leaving all the expensive operations based on capital (onerous capital increments and bonus issues, and real and nominal capital reductions). It is therefore essential that the s.r.l. governance determine alternative instruments for the administration of the company patrimony.
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