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Executive Corporate Finance: The Business of Enhancing Shareholder Value
ISBN: 0273675494
ISBN13: 9780273675495

Executive Corporate Finance: The Business of Enhancing Shareholder Value by Samir Asaf

Executive Corporate Finance: The Business of Enhancing Shareholder Value
By: Samir Asaf
Publisher: Financial Times Prentice Hall
Format: Paperback

Our Price: 34.99

 
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  Table of contents:

If you need to know the answer to the question, what are the latest corporate finance concepts and models currently being used by top corporations, to improve their business planning and execution, achieve superior returns, and manage business risks optimally? , then this book is for you. New developments in applied corporate financial techniques are helping many companies better understand and manage business risks, improve execution effectiveness and overall financial performance. This book provides a complete picture of state-of-the-art applied corporate finance, by presenting concepts and models in an integrated value maximisation framework. Thie book reveals the latest techniques in: *Shareholder Valuation: EVA, MVA, and Enterprise Valuation *Corporate Risk Exposure Measurement: Value at Risk (VaR) *Corporate Risk Management: Enterprise-Wide Risk Management (EWRM) *Applied Corporate Financial Planning Model (FPM) *Corporate Tax Planning Model: The SAVANT framework *Corporate Performance Assessment Model: The Modified Balanced Scorecard


Contents:

1

 Optimizing the Corporate Finance Function Introduction The External Business Environment and Corporate Financial Strategy The Strategic Logic of High Growth 2

Shareholder Value Maximization Introduction Corporate Valuation Valuation Models: Public Company Valuation Models: Closely held Company Corporate Performance Measurement: Economic Value Added (EVA) 3

Financial Policy Introduction Capital Structure Operating Leverage Dividend Policy Pricing Strategy Tax Planning Optimal Capital Budgeting with real Options Mergers and Acquisitions Asset-Liability Management: Optimizing the Balance Sheet 4

Risk Management Introduction Identifying and Estimating Risk Exposure Off-Balance Sheet (OBS) Risks Operational Risk Management Enterprise Wide Risk Management (EWRM) Risk Hedging Strategies 5

Financial Reporting, Planning and Control Introduction Financial Reporting: GAAP Convergence Business and Financial Planning Treasury Management Financial Control and Audit Optimize amid Changing Operating Conditions 6

Corporate Performance Management: The Balancing act? Introduction The Execution Problem The Balanced Scorecard Real-time Financial Systems: Corporate Performance Management (CPM) Integrated Financial Management Appendix: Applied Financial Optimization Modelling Value Maximisation: Analytical Techniques Company Size, Asset Utilization and Financial Leverage Brief Synopsis of each Chapter: Chapter 1: Introduction: Optimizing the Corporate Finance Function an integrated frameworkEach business is unique in terms of product, market, size, industry, management, culture, and financial strength

Companies need to tailor any generic model to its own unique needs and circumstances

Corporate financial management includes shareholder value maximization, risk management, financial planning, and performance assessment

Often these functions are viewed independently

For example, risk management is often performed by the treasury department on an ad hoc basis, and without an integrated planning and optimisation framework

The corporate finance function supports shareholder wealth creation by supporting corporate growth objectives with a disciplined financial foundation that is dynamically optimised with superior insights

The Modified Balanced Scorecard provides such a framework, which integrates economic value creation, enterprise-wide-risk management, and financial planning in an applied model

We discuss quantitative methods for optimisation of the corporate finance function, and assess qualitative aspects of real-world corporate finance that supports optimal decision-making, from a senior management perspective

 Chapter 2: Shareholder Value Maximization Shareholder value is maximized when a company maximizes its growth opportunities by making superior financing and investing decisions, while optimally managing the operational risks of the business

In this chapter, we discuss the major shareholder valuation methods, and analytical techniques for value maximization

This includes minimization of earnings and cash flow volatility

We focus on the economic valuation aspects or EVA-type valuation techniques instead of accounting-based valuations, and cover both publicly listed as well as privately held companies

 Chapter 3: Financial Policy Corporations usually have some guidelines they use for financial management, such as dividend payout amounts or payout ratios, debt-to-equity ratios, accounts receivable-to-revenue ratios and so on

As competition gets harder, simple rules-of-thumb or directionally right benchmarks are increasingly sub-optimal for corporate management purposes

We discuss and demonstrate how advanced quantitative techniques can be used to reach accurate optimising financial policy decisions, and how they can be modified over-time for dynamic optimisation

Beyond the analytical techniques, however, optimal financial policy-making involves superior insights into financial market dynamics, so that anticipated losses can be averted with appropriate risk management initiatives, and new market opportunities capitalized upon

 Chapter 4: Risk Management Applied financial optimisation is a quantitative discipline, and nowhere is that more obvious than in the area of financial planning

In this chapter, we discuss how a financial planning model can be optimised using stochastic programming, incorporating uncertainty into the model, and how Monte-Carlo simulations can be performed on the financial planning model

In the real world, this can be done real-time with financial systems such as Hyperion, PeopleSoft etc

that provide real-time financial statements, and with softwares such as Crystal Ball and Risk Optimizer that can be used to estimate optimal levels of decision-variables

 Chapter 5: Financial Reporting, Planning and Control This is a difficult topic, since risk, in general, is poorly understood and poorly estimated

Only some leading companies have integrated risk management systems in place that allow them to dynamically evaluate various financial risks such as exchange rate risk, interest rate risk, commodity price risk, and operational risks

We review the state-of-the-art risk estimation model: Value-at-Risk (VaR), and the latest integrated risk management model: Enterprise Wide Risk Management (EWRM)

We show how optimal risk exposures can be derived, and how that is, in turn, a part of the broader corporate performance assessment model: the modified balanced scorecard

 Chapter 6: Corporate Performance Management: the Balancing act In this chapter, a detailed financial planning model is presented that links the Balance Sheet, Income Statement, and Cash Flow Statement

The model estimates EVA and enterprise valuation, and VaR estimation of risk exposures, given certain assumptions and data-points

The financial model is then used to optimise financial policy

It also identifies areas where expenses can be streamlined, and financial controls implemented

We discuss the need for real-time financial systems with capabilities to disaggregate financial information

In light of the recent focus on financial data-integrity, we discuss how internal and external audits help that process

 Appendix: Optimizing Corporate Performance The Balanced Scorecard is a powerful method to assess corporate performance with both financial and non-financial metrics in the scorecard

We discuss how corporate performance can be optimised with a modified' balanced scorecard

The modifications we incorporate into the traditional balanced scorecard concept are the EWRM risk management model, the EVA valuation model, SAVANT tax planning model, the risk-adjusted value maximisation model, and the linkage among the four areas of performance assessment: financial perspective, customer perspective, learning and growth perspective, and internal operations and process perspective.


Brief Description:

This book will give you practical guidance on the latest concepts and applied models of the corporate financial world.

 

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