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2013 Reprint of 1962 Edition. Full facsimile of the original edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. "The Dividend Discount Model" is also known as the "Gordon model" named after professor Myron J. Gordon who popularized the model. Professor Gordon fathered this concept in this 1962 economic treatise. Although no investment model works for all stocks all of the time, the dividend discount model has proven to be a reliable way of selecting stocks that on average will perform relatively well on a long-term basis. It should be among the tools that investors use to select at least some of the stocks in their portfolio.
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Contiene: Macroeconomic motivation, neoclassical theory of finance and investment, a post keynesian theory of finance and investment; Neoclassical theory: neoclassical theory on capital structure, neoclassical theory on dividend policy, alternative models and their cost of equity capital; A post keynesian theory: Investment policy and long-run survival for a portfolio, pursuit of security and the stability of a keynesian, a macro model with a micro poundation; A theory of economic systems: growth, security and the transformation of economic.
Part-I: Foundations Of Finance Part-Ii: Valuation Part-Iii: Capital Budgeting Decisions Part -Iv: Long-Term Financing And Required Rate Of Return Part-V: The Management Of Working Capital Part-Vi: Selected Topics In Contemporary Finance Appendices Index
Lorie Tarshis held that much of the economic suffering in the 1970s was not necessary, that the crisis could have been easily eased had it not been for governments' faulty diagnoses and poorly-designed prescriptions. Faced with increasingly serious energy shortages, economic slowdowns, rising unemployment and skyrocketing Third World debt, Western governments responded with inflation-fighting policies left over from the Second World War that served only to exaccerbate the situation. In this book Tarshis recommended an overall strategy to confront these problems without resorting to the stopgaps then in vogue with government decision makers. World Economy in Crisis offers an acute diagnosis of the pervasive malaise facing the world economy in the 1970s, and a critical perspective on contemporary official responses to it.
Since World War II, the way economic policy has been formed both in Canada and abroad has changed radically. This book shows that the course taken in Canada has much to do with the crisis in the Canadian economy in the post-war period. Thornburn examines the response of other Western nations to the changing economic order of the postwar world, and then turns to an analysis of Canadian economic policy-making at the federal level and in all ten provinces. Thorburn points to the need for a central planning agency to correct the drift in Canada's economic policy. First published in 1984, Planning and the Economy is a strongly argued entry into the vital debates over Canadian political and economic policy in the early 1980s.
Why the book is interesting today is that it still is important and the most authoritative work on how to value financial assets. "Williams combined original theoretical concepts with enlightening and entertaining commentary based on his own experiences in the rough-and-tumble world of investment." Williams' discovery was to project an estimate that offers intrinsic value and it is called the 'Dividend Discount Model' which is still used today by professional investors on the institutional side of markets.
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