فهرست مطالب :
Welcome
Welcome
Part 1: Introduction
Part 1: Introduction
1: The Corporation and Financial Markets
Introduction: The Corporation and Financial Markets
1.1: The Four Types of Firms
1.1.2: Partnerships
1.1.3: Limited Liability Companies
1.1.4: Corporations
1.1.5: Tax Implications for Corporate Entities
1.2: Ownership Versus Control of Corporations
1.2.2: The Financial Manager
1.2.3: The Goal of the Firm
1.2.4: The Firm and Society
1.2.5: Ethics and Incentives within Corporations
1.3: The Stock Market
1.3.2: Traditional Trading Venues
1.3.3: New Competition and Market Changes
1.3.4: Dark Pools
1.4: FinTech: Finance and Technology
1.4.2: Security and Verification
1.4.3: Automation of Banking Services
1.4.4: Big Data and Machine Learning
1.4.5: Competition
Summary: The Corporation and Financial Markets
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
2: Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis
Introduction: Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis
2.1: Firms’ Disclosure of Financial Information
2.1.2: Types of Financial Statements
2.2: The Balance Sheet
2.2.2: Liabilities
2.2.3: Stockholders’ Equity
2.2.4: Market Value Versus Book Value
2.2.5: Enterprise Value
2.3: The Income Statement
2.4: The Statement of Cash Flows
2.4.2: Investment Activity
2.4.3: Financing Activity
2.5: Other Financial Statement Information
2.5.2: Management Discussion and Analysis
2.5.3: Notes to the Financial Statements
2.6: Financial Statement Analysis
2.6.2: Liquidity Ratios
2.6.3: Working Capital Ratios
2.6.4: Interest Coverage Ratios
2.6.5: Leverage Ratios
2.6.6: Valuation Ratios
2.6.7: Operating Returns
2.6.8: The DuPont Identity
2.7: Financial Reporting in Practice
2.7.2: WorldCom
2.7.3: Sarbanes-Oxley Act
2.7.4: Dodd-Frank Act
Summary: Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
3: Financial Decision Making and the Law of One Price
Introduction: Financial Decision Making and the Law of One Price
3.1: Valuing Decisions
3.1.2: Using Market Prices to Determine Cash Values
3.2: Interest Rates and the Time Value of Money
3.2.2: The Interest Rate: An Exchange Rate Across Time
3.3: Present Value and the NPV Decision Rule
3.3.2: The NPV Decision Rule
3.3.3: NPV and Cash Needs
3.4: Arbitrage and the Law of One Price
3.4.2: Law of One Price
3.5: No-Arbitrage and Security Prices
3.5.2: The NPV of Trading Securities and Firm Decision Making
3.5.3: Valuing a Portfolio
3.5.4: Where Do We Go from Here?
Summary: Financial Decision Making and the Law of One Price
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
3 Appendix: The Price of Risk
Introduction: The Price of Risk
3A.1: Risky Versus Risk-Free Cash Flows
3A.1.2: The No-Arbitrage Price of a Risky Security
3A.1.3: Risk Premiums Depend on Risk
3A.1.4: Risk Is Relative to the Overall Market
3A.1.5: Risk, Return, and Market Prices
3A.2: Arbitrage with Transactions Costs
Summary: The Price of Risk
Key Terms
Problems
Part 2: Time, Money, and Interest Rates
Part 2: Time, Money, and Interest Rates
4: The Time Value of Money
Introduction: The Time Value of Money
4.1: The Timeline
4.2: The Three Rules of Time Travel
4.2.2: Rule 2: Moving Cash Flows Forward in Time
4.2.3: Rule 3: Moving Cash Flows Back in Time
4.2.4: Applying the Rules of Time Travel
4.3: Valuing a Stream of Cash Flows
4.4: Calculating the Net Present Value
4.5: Perpetuities and Annuities
4.5.2: Annuities
4.5.3: Growing Cash Flows
4.6: Using an Annuity Spreadsheet or Calculator
4.7: Non-Annual Cash Flows
4.8: Solving for the Cash Payments
4.9: The Internal Rate of Return
Summary: The Time Value of Money
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
4 Appendix: Solving for the Number of Periods
Introduction: Solving for the Number of Periods
Summary: Solving for the Number of Periods
5: Interest Rates
Introduction: Interest Rates
5.1: Interest Rate Quotes and Adjustments
5.1.2: Annual Percentage Rates
5.2: Application: Discount Rates and Loans
5.3: The Determinants of Interest Rates
5.3.2: Investment and Interest Rate Policy
5.3.3: The Yield Curve and Discount Rates
5.3.4: The Yield Curve and the Economy
5.4: Risk and Taxes
5.4.2: After-Tax Interest Rates
5.5: The Opportunity Cost of Capital
Summary: Interest Rates
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
5 Appendix: Continuous Rates and Cash Flows
Introduction: Continuous Rates and Cash Flows
5A.1: Discount Rates for a Continuously Compounded APR
5A.2: Continuously Arriving Cash Flows
6: Valuing Bonds
Introduction: Valuing Bonds
6.1: Bond Cash Flows, Prices, and Yields
6.1.2: Zero-Coupon Bonds
6.1.3: Coupon Bonds
6.2: Dynamic Behavior of Bond Prices
6.2.2: Time and Bond Prices
6.2.3: Interest Rate Changes and Bond Prices
6.3: The Yield Curve and Bond Arbitrage
6.3.2: Valuing a Coupon Bond Using Zero-Coupon Yields
6.3.3: Coupon Bond Yields
6.3.4: Treasury Yield Curves
6.4: Corporate Bonds
6.4.2: Bond Ratings
6.4.3: Corporate Yield Curves
6.5: Sovereign Bonds
Summary: Valuing Bonds
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
Case Study
6 Appendix: Forward Interest Rates
Introduction: Forward Interest Rates
6A.1: Computing Forward Rates
6A.2: Computing Bond Yields from Forward Rates
6A.3: Forward Rates and Future Interest Rates
Summary: Forward Interest Rates
Key Terms
Problems
Part 3: Valuing Projects and Firms
Part 3: Valuing Projects and Firms
7: Investment Decision Rules
Introduction: Investment Decision Rules
7.1: NPV and Stand-Alone Projects
7.1.2: The NPV Profile and IRR
7.1.3: Alternative Rules Versus the NPV Rule
7.2: The Internal Rate of Return Rule
7.2.2: Pitfall #1: Delayed Investments
7.2.3: Pitfall #2: Multiple IRRs
7.2.4: Pitfall #3: Nonexistent IRR
7.3: The Payback Rule
7.3.2: Payback Rule Pitfalls in Practice
7.4: Choosing between Projects
7.4.2: IRR Rule and Mutually Exclusive Investments
7.4.3: The Incremental IRR
7.5: Project Selection with Resource Constraints
7.5.2: Profitability Index
7.5.3: Shortcomings of the Profitability Index
Summary: Investment Decision Rules
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
7 Appendix: Computing the NPV Profile Using Excel’s Data Table Function
7 Appendix: Computing the NPV Profile Using Excel’s Data Table Function
8: Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
Introduction: Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
8.1: Forecasting Earnings
8.1.2: Incremental Earnings Forecast
8.1.3: Indirect Effects on Incremental Earnings
8.1.4: Sunk Costs and Incremental Earnings
8.1.5: Real-World Complexities
8.2: Determining Free Cash Flow and NPV
8.2.2: Calculating Free Cash Flow Directly
8.2.3: Calculating the NPV
8.3: Choosing among Alternatives
8.3.2: Comparing Free Cash Flows for Cisco’s Alternatives
8.4: Further Adjustments to Free Cash Flow
8.5: Analyzing the Project
8.5.2: Sensitivity Analysis
8.5.3: Scenario Analysis
Summary: Fundamentals of Capital Budgeting
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
8 Appendix: MACRS Depreciation
8 Appendix: MACRS Depreciation
9: Valuing Stocks
Introduction: Valuing Stocks
9.1: The Dividend-Discount Model
9.1.2: Dividend Yields, Capital Gains, and Total Returns
9.1.3: A Multiyear Investor
9.1.4: The Dividend-Discount Model Equation
9.2: Applying the Dividend-Discount Model
9.2.2: Dividends Versus Investment and Growth
9.2.3: Changing Growth Rates
9.2.4: Limitations of the Dividend-Discount Model
9.3: Total Payout and Free Cash Flow Valuation Models
9.3.2: The Discounted Free Cash Flow Model
9.4: Valuation Based on Comparable Firms
9.4.2: Limitations of Multiples
9.4.3: Comparison with Discounted Cash Flow Methods
9.4.4: Stock Valuation Techniques: The Final Word
9.5: Information, Competition, and Stock Prices
9.5.2: Competition and Efficient Markets
9.5.3: Lessons for Investors and Corporate Managers
9.5.4: The Efficient Markets Hypothesis Versus No Arbitrage
Summary: Valuing Stocks
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
Part 4: Risk and Return
Part 4: Risk and Return
10: Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk
Introduction: Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk
10.1: Risk and Return: Insights from 92 Years of Investor History
10.2: Common Measures of Risk and Return
10.2.2: Expected Return
10.2.3: Variance and Standard Deviation
10.3: Historical Returns of Stocks and Bonds
10.3.2: Average Annual Returns
10.3.3: The Variance and Volatility of Returns
10.3.4: Estimation Error: Using Past Returns to Predict the Future
10.4: The Historical Tradeoff Between Risk and Return
10.4.2: The Returns of Individual Stocks
10.5: Common Versus Independent Risk
10.5.2: The Role of Diversification
10.6: Diversification in Stock Portfolios
10.6.2: No Arbitrage and the Risk Premium
10.7: Measuring Systematic Risk
10.7.2: Sensitivity to Systematic Risk: Beta
10.8: Beta and the Cost of Capital
10.8.2: The Capital Asset Pricing Model
Summary: Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
11: Optimal Portfolio Choice and the Capital Asset Pricing Model
Introduction: Optimal Portfolio Choice and the Capital Asset Pricing Model
11.1: The Expected Return of a Portfolio
11.2: The Volatility of a Two-Stock Portfolio
11.2.2: Determining Covariance and Correlation
11.2.3: Computing a Portfolio’s Variance and Volatility
11.3: The Volatility of a Large Portfolio
11.3.2: Diversification with an Equally Weighted Portfolio
11.3.3: Diversification with General Portfolios
11.4: Risk Versus Return: Choosing an Efficient Portfolio
11.4.2: The Effect of Correlation
11.4.3: Short Sales
11.4.4: Efficient Portfolios with Many Stocks
11.5: Risk-Free Saving and Borrowing
11.5.2: Borrowing and Buying Stocks on Margin
11.5.3: Identifying the Tangent Portfolio
11.6: The Efficient Portfolio and Required Returns
11.6.2: Expected Returns and the Efficient Portfolio
11.7: The Capital Asset Pricing Model
11.7.2: Supply, Demand, and the Efficiency of the Market Portfolio
11.7.3: Optimal Investing: The Capital Market Line
11.8: Determining the Risk Premium
11.8.2: The Security Market Line
11.8.3: Beta of a Portfolio
11.8.4: Summary of the Capital Asset Pricing Model
Summary: Optimal Portfolio Choice and the Capital Asset Pricing Model
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
11 Appendix: The CAPM with Differing Interest Rates
Introduction: The CAPM with Differing Interest Rates
11A.1: The Efficient Frontier with Differing Saving and Borrowing Rates
11A.2: The Security Market Line with Differing Interest Rates
12: Estimating the Cost of Capital
Introduction: Estimating the Cost of Capital
12.1: The Equity Cost of Capital
12.2: The Market Portfolio
12.2.2: Market Indexes
12.2.3: The Market Risk Premium
12.3: Beta Estimation
12.3.2: Identifying the Best-Fitting Line
12.3.3: Using Linear Regression
12.4: The Debt Cost of Capital
12.4.2: Debt Betas
12.5: A Project’s Cost of Capital
12.5.2: Levered Firms as Comparables
12.5.3: The Unlevered Cost of Capital
12.5.4: Industry Asset Betas
12.6: Project Risk Characteristics and Financing
12.6.2: Financing and the Weighted Average Cost of Capital
12.7: Final Thoughts on Using the CAPM
Summary: Estimating the Cost of Capital
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
12 Appendix: Practical Considerations When Forecasting Beta
Introduction: Practical Considerations When Forecasting Beta
12A.1: Time Horizon
12A.2: The Market Proxy
12A.3: Beta Variation and Extrapolation
12A.4: Outliers
12A.5: Other Considerations
Summary: Practical Considerations When Forecasting Beta
Data Case
13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency
Introduction: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency
13.1: Competition and Capital Markets
13.1.2: Profiting from Non-Zero Alpha Stocks
13.2: Information and Rational Expectations
13.2.2: Rational Expectations
13.3: The Behavior of Individual Investors
13.3.2: Excessive Trading and Overconfidence
13.3.3: Individual Behavior and Market Prices
13.4: Systematic Trading Biases
13.4.2: Investor Attention, Mood, and Experience
13.4.3: Herd Behavior
13.4.4: Implications of Behavioral Biases
13.5: The Efficiency of the Market Portfolio
13.5.2: The Performance of Fund Managers
13.5.3: The Winners and Losers
13.6: Style-Based Techniques and the Market Efficiency Debate
13.6.2: Momentum
13.6.3: Implications of Positive-Alpha Trading Strategies
13.7: Multifactor Models of Risk
13.7.2: Smart Beta
13.7.3: Long-Short Portfolios
13.7.4: Selecting the Portfolios
13.7.5: The Cost of Capital with Fama-French-Carhart Factor Specification
13.8: Methods Used in Practice
13.8.2: Investors
Summary: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
13 Appendix: Building a Multifactor Model
Introdcution: Building a Multifactor Model
Part 5: Capital Structure
Part 5: Capital Structure
14: Capital Structure in a Perfect Market
Introduction: Capital Structure in a Perfect Market
14.1: Equity Versus Debt Financing
14.1.2: Financing a Firm with Debt and Equity
14.1.3: The Effect of Leverage on Risk and Return
14.2: Modigliani-Miller I: Leverage, Arbitrage, and Firm Value
14.2.2: Homemade Leverage
14.2.3: The Market Value Balance Sheet
14.2.4: Application: A Leveraged Recapitalization
14.3: Modigliani-Miller II: Leverage, Risk, and the Cost of Capital
14.3.2: Capital Budgeting and the Weighted Average Cost of Capital
14.3.3: Computing the WACC with Multiple Securities
14.3.4: Levered and Unlevered Betas
14.4: Capital Structure Fallacies
14.4.2: Equity Issuances and Dilution
14.5: MM: Beyond the Propositions
Summary: Capital Structure in a Perfect Market
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
15: Debt and Taxes
Introduction: Debt and Taxes
15.1: The Interest Tax Deduction
15.2: Valuing the Interest Tax Shield
15.2.2: The Interest Tax Shield with Permanent Debt
15.2.3: The Weighted Average Cost of Capital with Taxes
15.2.4: The Interest Tax Shield with a Target Debt-Equity Ratio
15.3: Recapitalizing to Capture the Tax Shield
15.3.2: The Share Repurchase
15.3.3: No Arbitrage Pricing
15.3.4: Analyzing the Recap: The Market Value Balance Sheet
15.4: Personal Taxes
15.4.2: Determining the Actual Tax Advantage of Debt
15.4.3: Valuing the Interest Tax Shield with Personal Taxes
15.5: Optimal Capital Structure with Taxes
15.5.2: Limits to the Tax Benefit of Debt
15.5.3: Growth and Debt
15.5.4: Other Tax Shields
15.5.5: The Low Leverage Puzzle
Summary: Debt and Taxes
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
16: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information
Introduction: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information
16.1: Default and Bankruptcy in a Perfect Market
16.1.2: Bankruptcy and Capital Structure
16.2: The Costs of Bankruptcy and Financial Distress
16.2.2: Direct Costs of Bankruptcy
16.2.3: Indirect Costs of Financial Distress
16.3: Financial Distress Costs and Firm Value
16.3.2: Who Pays for Financial Distress Costs?
16.4: Optimal Capital Structure: The Tradeoff Theory
16.4.2: Optimal Leverage
16.5: Exploiting Debt Holders: The Agency Costs of Leverage
16.5.2: Debt Overhang and Under-Investment
16.5.3: Agency Costs and the Value of Leverage
16.5.4: The Leverage Ratchet Effect
16.5.5: Debt Maturity and Covenants
16.6: Motivating Managers: The Agency Benefits of Leverage
16.6.2: Reduction of Wasteful Investment
16.6.3: Leverage and Commitment
16.7: Agency Costs and the Tradeoff Theory
16.7.2: Debt Levels in Practice
16.8: Asymmetric Information and Capital Structure
16.8.2: Issuing Equity and Adverse Selection
16.8.3: Implications for Equity Issuance
16.8.4: Implications for Capital Structure
16.9: Capital Structure: The Bottom Line
Summary: Financial Distress, Managerial Incentives, and Information
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
17: Payout Policy
Introduction: Payout Policy
17.1: Distributions to Shareholders
17.1.2: Share Repurchases
17.2: Comparison of Dividends and Share Repurchases
17.2.2: Alternative Policy 2: Share Repurchase (No Dividend)
17.2.3: Alternative Policy 3: High Dividend (Equity Issue)
17.2.4: Modigliani-Miller and Dividend Policy Irrelevance
17.2.5: Dividend Policy with Perfect Capital Markets
17.3: The Tax Disadvantage of Dividends
17.3.2: Optimal Dividend Policy with Taxes
17.4: Dividend Capture and Tax Clienteles
17.4.2: Tax Differences Across Investors
17.4.3: Clientele Effects
17.5: Payout Versus Retention of Cash
17.5.2: Taxes and Cash Retention
17.5.3: Adjusting for Investor Taxes
17.5.4: Issuance and Distress Costs
17.5.5: Agency Costs of Retaining Cash
17.6: Signaling with Payout Policy
17.6.2: Dividend Signaling
17.6.3: Signaling and Share Repurchases
17.7: Stock Dividends, Splits, and Spin-Offs
17.7.2: Spin-Offs
Summary: Payout Policy
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
Part 6: Advanced Valuation
Part 6: Advanced Valuation
18: Capital Budgeting and Valuation with Leverage
Introduction: Capital Budgeting and Valuation with Leverage
18.1: Overview of Key Concepts
18.2: The Weighted Average Cost of Capital Method
18.2.2: Summary of the WACC Method
18.2.3: Implementing a Constant Debt-Equity Ratio
18.3: The Adjusted Present Value Method
18.3.2: Valuing the Interest Tax Shield
18.3.3: Summary of the APV Method
18.4: The Flow-to-Equity Method
18.4.2: Valuing Equity Cash Flows
18.4.3: Summary of the Flow-to-Equity Method
18.5: Project-Based Costs of Capital
18.5.2: Project Leverage and the Equity Cost of Capital
18.5.3: Determining the Incremental Leverage of a Project
18.6: APV with Other Leverage Policies
18.6.2: Predetermined Debt Levels
18.6.3: A Comparison of Methods
18.7: Other Effects of Financing
18.7.2: Security Mispricing
18.7.3: Financial Distress and Agency Costs
18.8: Advanced Topics in Capital Budgeting
18.8.2: Leverage and the Cost of Capital
18.8.3: The WACC or FTE Method with Changing Leverage
18.8.4: Personal Taxes
Summary: Capital Budgeting and Valuation with Leverage
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
Data Case
18 Appendix: Foundations and Further Details
Introduction: Foundations and Further Details
18A.1: Deriving the WACC Method
18A.2: The Levered and Unlevered Cost of Capital
18A.3: Solving for Leverage and Value Simultaneously
18A.4: The Residual Income and Economic Value Added Valuation Methods
19: Valuation and Financial Modeling: A Case Study
Introduction: Valuation and Financial Modeling: A Case Study
19.1: Valuation Using Comparables
19.2: The Business Plan
19.2.2: Capital Expenditures: A Needed Expansion
19.2.3: Working Capital Management
19.2.4: Capital Structure Changes: Levering Up
19.3: Building the Financial Model
19.3.2: Working Capital Requirements
19.3.3: Forecasting Free Cash Flow
19.3.4: The Balance Sheet and Statement of Cash Flows (Optional)
19.4: Estimating the Cost of Capital
19.4.2: Unlevering Beta
19.4.3: Ideko’s Unlevered Cost of Capital
19.5: Valuing the Investment
19.5.2: The Discounted Cash Flow Approach to Continuation Value
19.5.3: APV Valuation of Ideko’s Equity
19.5.4: A Reality Check
19.5.5: IRR and Cash Multiples
19.6: Sensitivity Analysis
Summary: Valuation and Financial Modeling: A Case Study
Key Terms
Further Reading
Problems
19 Appendix: Compensating Management
19 Appendix: Compensating Management
Copyright Page and Preface
Section 1: Dedication and Copyright
Section 2: Bridging Theory and Practice
Section 3: Teaching Students to Think Finance
Section 4: MyLab Finance
Section 5: Improving Results
Section 6: About the Authors
Section 7: Preface
Section 8: Common Symbols and Notation
Section 9: Features by Chapter
Glossary
Glossary