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Cover Image
Financial markets and corporate strategy:
Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hillier, David 1962- (Author), Grinblatt, Mark (Author), Titman, Sheridan 1954- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: London [u.a] McGraw-Hill Irwin 2008
Edition:European Edition
Subjects:
Financiering
Financiële instellingen
Strategische planning
Business planning
Corporations > Finance
Financial institutions
Strategic planning
Finanzierung
Kapitalmarkt
Strategische Planung
Kreditmarkt
Unternehmensplanung
Unternehmen
Verenigde Staten
USA
Europa
Lehrbuch
Links:http://www.gbv.de/dms/zbw/566304252.pdfTest
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Physical Description:XXIII, 915 S. graph. Darst.
ISBN:0077119029
9780077119027
Staff View

MARC

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Record in the Search Index

_version_ 1819293617515134976
adam_text Detailed Table of Contents PART 1 Financial Markets and Financial Instruments / 1 Raising Capital: the Process and the Players 3 1.1 Financing the Firm 4 Decisions Facing the Firm 5 Who has the Biggest Capital Markets? 6 1.2 Public and Private Sources of Capital 7 1.3 The Environment for Raising Capital 9 The Legal Environment 9 Investment Banks // The Underwriting Process // The Underwriting Agreement 12 Classifying Offerings 13 The Costs of Debt and Equity Issues 13 Types of Underwriting Arrangements 13 1.4 Raising Capital in International Markets 18 Euromarkets 18 Direct Issuance 18 1.5 Major Financial Markets outside the United States 18 Germany 18 Japan 20 United Kingdom 22 China 24 1.6 Trends in Raising Capital 25 Globalization 25 Deregulation 25 Innovative Instruments 25 Technology 26 Securitization 26 1.7 Summary and Conclusions 26 References and Additional Readings 29 2 Debt Financing 31 2.1 Bank Loans 32 Types of Bank Loan 33 Floating Rates 33 Loan Covenants 34 2.2 Leases 34 2.3 Commercial Paper 36 Who Sells Commercial Paper? 36 Buyback Provisions 36 2.4 Corporate Bonds 37 Bond Covenants 38 Bond Options 40 Cash Flow Pattern 44 Bond Prices: Par, Discount and Premium Bonds 46 Maturity 46 Bond Ratings 48 The High-Yield Debt Market 49 2.5 Asset-Backed Securities 51 2.6 More Exotic Securities 52 Tax and Regulatory Frictions as Motivators for Innovation 52 Macroeconomic Conditions and Financial Innovation 52 Financial Innovation in Emerging Capital Markets 53 The Junk Bond Market and Financial Innovation 53 A Perspective on the Pace of Financial Innovation 53 2.7 Raising Debt Capital in the Euromarkets 54 Features of Eurobonds 54 Size and Growth of the Eurobond Market and the Forces behind the Growth 54 Eurocurrency Loans 55 2.8 Primary and Secondary Markets for Debt 56 The Primary and Secondary Market for Treasury Securities 56 The Primary and Secondary Market for Corporate Bonds 56 2.9 Bond Prices, Yields to Maturity and Bond Market Conventions 57 Settlement Dates 59 Accrued Interest 59 Yields to Maturity and Coupon Yields 62 2.10 Summary and Conclusions 64 References and Additional Readings 67 3 Equity Financing 69 3.1 Types of Equity Securities 70 Common Stock 70 Preferred Stock 71 Warrants 73 Volume of Global Equity Financing 73 3.2 Shareholder Ownership around the World 73 3.3 The Globalization of Equity Markets 74 3.4 Secondary Markets for Equity 75 Types of Secondary Market for Equity 75 Exchanges 76 Electronic Communication Networks (ECNs) 76 VII viii Chapter Detailed Table of Contents 3.5 Equity Market Informational Efficiency and Capital Allocation 76 3.6 Private Equity 77 3.7 The Decision to Issue Shares Publicly 78 Demand- and Supply-Side Explanations for IPO Cycles 79 The Benefits of Going Public 79 The Costs of Going Public 80 The Process of Going Public 81 3.8 Stock Returns Associated with IPOs of Common Equity 83 The Underpricing of IPOs 83 What are the Long-Term Returns of IPOs? 83 3.9 What Explains Underpricing? 84 How Do I Get These Underpriced Shares? 84 The Incentives of Underwriters 84 The Case Where the Managers of the Issuing Firm have Better Information than Investors 85 The Case Where Some Investors have Better Information than Other Investors 85 The Case Where Investors have Information that the Underwriter Does Not 86 References and Additional Readings 89 PART II Valuing Financial Assets 4 Portfolio Tools 97 4.1 Portfolio Weights 99 The Two-Stock Portfolio 99 The Many-Stock Portfolio 101 4.2 Portfolio Returns 102 4.3 Expected Portfolio Returns 103 Portfolios of Two Stocks 103 Portfolios of Many Stocks 104 4.4 Variances and Standard Deviations 105 Return Variances 105 Estimating Variances: Statistical Issues 106 Standard Deviation 107 4.5 Covariances and Correlations 107 Covariance 107 4.6 Variances of Portfolios and Covariances between Portfolios no Variances for Two-Stock Portfolios 110 Correlations, Diversification and Portfolio Variances 112 Portfolios of Many Stocks 115 Covariances between Portfolio Returns and Stock Returns 7/6 4.7 The Mean-Standard Deviation Diagram /76 Combining a Risk-Free Asset with a Risky Asset in the Mean-Standard Deviation Diagram 117 Portfolios of Two Perfectly Positively Correlated or Perfectly Negatively Correlated Assets 119 The Feasible Means and Standard Deviations from Portfolios of Other Pairs of Assets 120 4.8 Interpreting the Covariance as a Marginal Variance 72 7 A Proof Using Derivatives from Calculus 121 Numerical Interpretations of the Marginal Variance Result 722 4.9 Finding the Minimum Variance Portfolio 724 Properties of a Minimum Variance Portfolio 124 Identifying the Minimum Variance Portfolio of Two Stocks 725 Identifying the Minimum Variance Portfolio of Many Stocks 726 4.10 Summary and Conclusions 727 References and Additional Readings 133 5 Mean-Variance Analysis and the Capital Asset Pricing Model 134 5.1 Applications of Mean-Variance Analysis and the CAPM in Use Today 736 Investment Applications of Mean-Variance Analysis and the CAPM 136 Corporate Applications of Mean-Variance Analysis and the CAPM 136 5.2 The Essentials of Mean-Variance Analysis 136 The Feasible Set 136 The Assumptions of Mean-Variance Analysis 137 5.3 The Efficient Frontier and Two-Fund Separation 139 The Quest for the Holy Grail: Optimal Portfolios 139 Two-Fund Separation 139 5.4 The Tangency Portfolio and Optimal Investment 141 Optimal Investment when a Risk-Free Asset Exists 141 Identification of the Tangency Portfolio 144 5.5 Finding the Efficient Frontier of Risky Assets 146 5.6 How Useful Is Mean-Variance Analysis for Finding Efficient Portfolios? 147 5.7 The Relation Between Risk and Expected Return 749 Relevant Risk and the Tangency Portfolio 749 Betas 750 Marginal Variance versus Total Variance 752 Detailed Table of Contents ix Tracking Portfolios in Portfolio Management and as a Theme for Valuation 152 5.8 The Capital Asset Pricing Model 154 Assumptions of the CAPM 154 The Conclusion of the CAPM 154 The Market Portfolio 155 Why the Market Portfolio is the Tangency Portfolio 155 Implications for Optimal Investment /56 5.9 Estimating Betas, Risk-Free Returns, Risk Premiums and the 757 Market Portfolio 157 Risk-Free or Zero-Beta Returns 158 Beta Estimation and Beta Shrinkage 158 Improving the Beta Estimated from Regression 158 Estimating the Market Risk Premium 161 Identifying the Market Portfolio 161 5.10 Empirical Tests of the Capital Asset Pricing Model 161 Can the CAPM Really be Tested? 162 Is the Value-Weighted Market Index Mean-Variance Efficient? 163 Cross-Sectional Tests of the CAPM 163 Time-Series Tests of the CAPM 165 Results of the Cross-Sectional and Time-Series Tests: Size, Market-to-Book and Momentum /66 International Evidence /69 Interpreting the CAPM s Empirical Shortcomings /69 Are these CAPM Anomalies Disappearing? 170 5.11 Summary and Conclusions 172 References and Additional Readings 177 6 Factor Models and the Arbitrage Pricing Theory 180 6.1 The Market Model: the First Factor Model 182 The Market Model Regression 182 The Market Model Variance Decomposition 183 Diversifiable Risk and Fallacious CAPM Intuition 184 Residual Correlation and Factor Models 185 6.2 The Principle of Diversification 185 Insurance Analogies to Factor Risk and Firm-Specific Risk 186 Quantifying the Diversification of Firm-Specific Risk 186 6.3 Multifactor Models 187 The Multifactor Model Equation 187 Interpreting Common Factors 188 6.4 Estimating the Factors 188 Using Factor Analysis to Generate Factor Portfolios 189 Using Macroeconomic Variables to Generate Factors 189 Using Characteristic-Sorted Portfolios to Estimate the Factors 190 6.5 Factor Betas 191 What Determines Factor Betas? 191 Factor Models for Portfolios 191 6.6 Using Factor Models to Compute Covariances and Variances 193 Computing Covariances in a One-Factor Model 193 Computing Covariances from Factor Betas in a Multifactor Model 194 Factor Models and Correlations between Stock Returns 195 Applications of Factor Models to Mean-Variance Analysis 195 Using Factor Models to Compute Variances 195 6.7 Factor Models and Tracking Portfolios /96 Tracking Portfolios and Corporate Hedging 197 Capital Allocation Decisions of Corporations and Tracking Portfolios 197 Designing Tracking Portfolios 197 6.8 Pure Factor Portfolios 199 Constructing Pure Factor Portfolios from More Primitive Securities 199 The Risk Premiums of Pure Factor Portfolios 200 6.9 Tracking and Arbitrage 201 Using Pure Factor Portfolios to Track the Returns of a Security 202 The Expected Return of the Tracking Portfolio 202 Decomposing Pure Factor Portfolios into Weights on More Primitive Securities 203 6.10 No Arbitrage and Pricing: the Arbitrage Pricing Theory 203 The Assumptions of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory 204 Arbitrage Pricing Theory with No Firm-Specific Risk 204 Graphing the APT Risk-Return Equation 205 Verifying the Existence of Arbitrage 205 The Risk-Expected Return Relation for Securities with Firm-Specific Risk 208 Violations of the APT Equation by Large Numbers of Stocks Imply Arbitrage 209 6.11 Estimating Factor Risk Premiums and Factor Betas 210 Chapter Detailed Table of Contents 6.12 Empirical Tests of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory 210 Empirical Implications of the APT 27 7 Evidence from Factor Analysis Studies 27 7 Evidence from Studies with Macroeconomic Factors 2/7 Evidence from Studies that Use Firm Characteristics 212 6.13 Summary and Conclusions 2 72 References and Additional Readings 2 76 7 Pricing Derivatives 2 79 7.1 Examples of Derivatives 22 7 Forwards and Futures 22 7 Swaps 225 Options 227 Real Assets 23 7 Mortgage-Backed Securities 23 7 Structured Notes 232 7.2 The Basics of Derivatives Pricing 232 Perfect Tracking Portfolios 232 No Arbitrage and Valuation 233 Applying the Basic Principles of Derivatives Valuation to Value Forwards 233 73 Binomial Pricing Models 237 Tracking and Valuation: Static versus Dynamic Strategies 237 Binomial Model Tracking of a Structured Bond 238 Using Tracking Portfolios to Value Derivatives 239 Risk-Neutral Valuation of Derivatives: the Industry Approach 242 7 A Multiperiod Binomial Valuation 248 How Restrictive is the Binomial Process in a Multiperiod Setting? 248 Numerical Example of Multiperiod Binomial Valuation 249 Algebraic Representation of Two-Period Binomial Valuation 250 7.5 Valuation Techniques in the Financial Services Industry 257 Numerical Methods 25 7 The Risk-Free Rate Used by Industry Practitioners 253 7.6 Market Frictions and Lessons from the Fate of Amaranth Advisors 253 7.7 Summary and Conclusions 254 References and Additional Readings 260 8 Options 26 7 8.1 A Description of Options and Options Markets 262 European and American Options 262 The Four Features of Options 263 8.2 Option Expiration 263 8.3 Put-Call Parity 264 Put-Call Parity and Forward Contracts: Deriving the Formula 264 Put-Call Parity and a Minimum Value for a Call 267 Put-Call Parity and the Pricing and Premature Exercise of American Calls 26Ő Put-Call Parity and Corporate Securities as Options 277 Put-Call Parity and Portfolio Insurance 273 8.4 Binomial Valuation of European Options 275 8.5 Binomial Valuation of American Options 277 American Puts 278 Valuing American Options on Dividend-Paying Stocks 280 8.6 Black-Scholes Valuation 280 Black-Scholes Formula 2Ő7 Dividends and the Black-Scholes Model 282 8.7 Estimating Volatility 283 Using Historical Data 283 The Implied Volatility Approach 285 8.8 Black-Scholes Price Sensitivity to Stock Price, Volatility, Interest Rates and Expiration Time 2Ő6 Delta: the Sensitivity to Stock Price Changes 2S6 Black-Scholes Option Values and Stock Volatility 287 Option Values and Time to Option Expiration 288 Option Values and the Risk-Free Interest Rate 288 A Summary of the Effects of the Parameter Changes 288 8.9 Valuing Options on More Complex Assets 289 The Forward Price Version of the Black-Scholes Model 289 Computing Forward Prices from Spot Prices 289 Applications of the Forward Price Version of the Black-Scholes Formula 290 American Options 290 American Call and Put Currency Options 292 8.10 Empirical Biases in the Black- Scholes Formula 292 8.11 Summary and Conclusions 294 References and Additional Readings 297 PART III Valuing Real Assets 9 Discounting and Valuation 305 9.1 Cash Flows of Real Assets 306 Unlevered Cash Flows 307 Creating Pro-Forma Forecasts of Financial Statements 3 72 Detailed Table of Contents XI 9.2 Using Discount Rates to Obtain Present Values 317 Single-Period Returns and their Interpretation 317 Rates of Return in a Multiperiod Setting 318 Value Additivity and Present Values of Cash Flow Streams 320 Inflation 321 Annuities and Perpetuities 322 Simple Interest 327 Time Horizons and Compounding Frequencies 328 9.3 Summary and Conclusions 331 References and Additional Readings 337 10 Investing in Risk-Free Projects 338 10.1 Cash Flows 340 10.2 Net Present Value 340 Discounted Cash Flow and Net Present Value 340 Project Evaluation with the Net Present Value Rule 342 Present Values and Net Present Values Have the Value Additivity Property 344 Using AW with Capital Constraints 347 Using NPV to Evaluate Projects that Can Be Repeated over Time 348 10.3 Economic Value Added (EVA) 349 10.4 Using NPV for Other Corporate Decisions 351 10.5 Evaluating Real Investments with the Internal Rate of Return 352 Intuition for the IRR Method 353 Numerical Iteration of the IRR 354 NPV and Examples of IRR 354 Term Structure Issues 358 Cash Flow Sign Patterns and the Number of Internal Rates of Return 358 Sign Reversals and Multiple Internal Rates of Return 362 Mutually Exclusive Projects and the Internal Rate of Return 363 10.6 Popular but Incorrect Procedures for Evaluating Real Investments 365 The Payback Method 365 The Accounting Rate of Return Criterion 365 10.7 Summary and Conclusions 366 References and Additional Readings 371 Appendix 1 0A The Term Structure Of Interest Rates 372 10A.1 Term Structure Varieties 372 10A.2 Spot Rates, Annuity Rates and Par Rates 372 References and Additional Readings for Appendix 10A 378 11 Investing in Risky Projects 379 11.1 Tracking Portfolios and Real Asset Valuation 382 Asset Pricing Models and the Tracking Portfolio Approach 382 Implementing the Tracking Portfolio Approach 384 Linking Financial Asset Tracking to Real Asset Valuation with the SML 384 11.2 The Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate Method 385 Defining and Implementing the Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate Method with Given Betas 385 The Tracking Portfolio Method is Implicit in the Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate Method 387 11.3 The Effect of Leverage on Comparisons 387 The Balance Sheet for an All-Equity- Financed Firm 388 The Balance Sheet for a Firm Partially Financed with Debt 388 The Right-Hand Side of the Balance Sheet as a Portfolio 388 Distinguishing Risk-Free Debt from Default-Free Debt 389 Graphs and Numerical Illustrations of the Effect of Debt on Risk 390 11.4 Implementing the Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate Formula with Comparison Firms 391 The CAPM, the Comparison Method and Adjusting for Leverage 392 Obtaining a Cost of Capital from the Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) 393 Costs of Capital Computed with Alternatives to CAPM and APT: Dividend Discount Models 394 What if No Pure Comparison Firm Exists? 397 11.5 Pitfalls in Using the Comparison Method 397 Project Betas are Not the Same as Firm Betas 398 Growth Opportunities are Usually the Source of High Betas 399 Multiperiod Risk-Adjusted Discount Rates 401 Empirical Failures of the CAPM and APT 404 What if No Comparable Line of Business Exists? 405 11.6 Estimating Beta from Scenarios: the Certainty Equivalent Method 409 Defining the Certainty Equivalent Method 409 Identifying the Certainty Equivalent from Models of Risk and Return 410 xii Chapter Detailed Table of Contents The CAPM, Scenarios and the Certainty Equivalent Method 412 The APT and the Certainty Equivalent Method 4T3 The Relation between the Certainty Equivalent Formula and the Tracking Portfolio Approach 413 11.7 Obtaining Certainty Equivalents with Risk-Free Scenarios 4 ы A Description of the Risk-Free Scenario Method 4/4 Implementing the Risk-Free Scenario Method in a Multiperiod Setting 417 Providing Certainty Equivalents without Knowing it 419 11.8 Computing Certainty Equivalents from Prices in Financial Markets 419 Forward Prices 419 Tracking Portfolios That Contain Forward Contracts 419 11.9 Summary and Conclusions 420 References and Additional Readings 424 Appendix 11 A 425 Statistical Issues in Estimating the Cost of Capital for the Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate Method 425 1 1A.1 Estimation Error and Denominator-Based Biases in Present Value Estimates 425 1 1A.2 Geometric versus Arithmetic Means and the Compounding-Based Bias 426 References and Additional Readings for Appendix 11A 429 12 Allocating Capital and Corporate Strategy 430 12.1 Sources of Positive Net Present Value 431 Sources of Competitive Advantage 432 Economies of Scope, Discounted Cash Flow and Options 433 Option Pricing Theory as a Tool for Quantifying Economies of Scope 433 12.2 Valuing Strategic Options with the Real Options Methodology 434 Valuing a Mine with No Strategic Options 434 Valuing a Mine with an Abandonment Option 437 Valuing Vacant Land 440 Valuing the Option to Delay the Start of a Manufacturing Project 442 Valuing the Option to Expand Capacity 445 Valuing Flexibility in Production Technology: the Advantage of Being Different 446 12.3 The Ratio Comparison Approach 448 The Price/Earnings Ratio Method 451 When Comparison Investments are Hidden in Multibusiness Firms 451 The Effect of Earnings Growth and Accounting Methodology on Price/ Earnings Ratios 452 The Effect of Leverage on Price/Earnings Ratios 453 Adjusting for Leverage Differences 455 12.4 The Competitive Analysis Approach 455 Determining a Division s Contribution to Firm Value 456 Disadvantages of the Competitive Analysis Approach 456 12.5 When to Use the Different Approaches 456 Can these Approaches be Implemented? 457 Valuing Asset Classes versus Specific Assets 457 Tracking Error Considerations 457 Other Considerations 457 12.6 Summary and Conclusions 458 References and Additional Readings 463 13 Corporate Taxes and the Impact of Financing on Real Asset Valuation 466 13.1 Corporate Taxes and the Evaluation of Equity-Financed Capital Expenditures 46Ő The Cost of Capital 468 The Risk of the Components of the Firm s Balance Sheet with Tax-Deductible Debt Interest 469 Identifying the Unlevered Cost of Capital 471 13.2 The Adjusted Present Value Method 473 Three Sources of Value Creation for Shareholders 473 Debt Capacity 474 The APV Method is Versatile and Usable with Many Valuation Techniques 475 13.3 The Weighted Average Cost of Capital 481 Valuing a Business with the WACC Method when a Debt Tax Shield Exists 481 WACC Components: the Cost of Equity Financing 482 WACC Components: the Cost of Debt Financing 482 Determining the Costs of Debt and Equity when the Project is Adopted 484 The Effect of Leverage on a Firm s WACC when there are no Taxes 485 Detailed Table of Contents XIII The Effect of Leverage on a Firm s WACC with a Debt Interest Corporate Tax Deduction 486 Evaluating Individual Projects with the WACC Method 490 13.4 Discounting Cash Flows to Equity Holders 493 Positive NPV Projects Can Reduce Share Prices when Transfers to Debt Holders Occur 493 Computing Cash Flows to Equity Holders 494 Valuing Cash Flow to Equity Holders 495 Real Options versus the Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate Method 496 13.5 Summary and Conclusions 496 References and Additional Readings 500 PART IV Capital Structure 14 How Taxes Affect Financing Choices 507 14.1 The Modigliani-Miller Theorem 508 Slicing the Cash Flows of the Firm 508 Proof of the Modigliani-Miller Theorem 5Ю Assumptions of the Modigliani-Miller Theorem 511 14.2 How an Individual Investor Can Undo a Firm s Capital Structure Choice 5/3 14.3 How Risky Debt Affects the Modigliani-Miller Theorem 513 The Modigliani-Miller Theorem with Costless Bankruptcy 513 Leverage Increases and Wealth Transfers 514 14.4 How Corporate Taxes Affect the Capital Structure Choice 5/6 How Debt Affects After-Tax Cash Flows 517 How Debt Affects the Value of the Firm 517 14.5 How Personal Taxes Affect Capital Structure 519 The Effect of Personal Taxes on Debt and Equity Rates of Return 520 Capital Structure Choices when Taxable Earnings can be Negative 523 14.6 Taxes and Preference Shares 526 14.7 The Effect of Inflation on the Tax Gain from Leverage 526 14.8 The Empirical Implications of the Analysis of Debt and Taxes 527 Do Firms with More Taxable Earnings Use More Debt Financing? 527 14.9 Are There Tax Advantages to Leasing? 528 Operating Leases and Capital Leases 528 The After-Tax Costs of Leasing and Buying Capital Assets 529 14.10 Summary and Conclusions 531 References and Additional Readings 535 APPENDIX 14A 537 How Personal Taxes Affect the Capital Structure Choice: the Miller Equilibrium 537 15 How Taxes Affect Dividends and Share Repurchases 539 15.1 How Much of Corporate Earnings is Distributed to Shareholders? 540 Aggregate Dividend Payouts 540 Dividend Policies of Selected Firms 541 15.2 Distribution Policy in Frictionless Markets 542 The Miller-Modigliani Dividend Irrelevancy Theorem 542 Optimal Payout Policy in the Absence of Taxes and Transaction Costs 544 15.3 The Effect of Taxes and Transaction Costs on Distribution Policy 545 A Comparison of the Classical and Imputation Tax Systems 546 The Tax System in the United Kingdom 546 Other Tax Systems 547 How Taxes Affect Dividend Policy 547 Dividend Clienteles 548 Why do Corporations Pay Out So Much in Taxed Dividends? 549 15.4 How Dividend Policy Affects Expected Stock Returns 550 Ex-Dividend Stock Price Movements 550 The Cross-Sectional Relation between Dividend Yields and Stock Returns 552 15.5 How Dividend Taxes Affect Financing and Investment Choices 553 Dividends, Taxes and Financing Choices 553 Dividends, Taxes and Investment Distortions 553 15.6 Personal Taxes, Payout Policy and Capital Structure 559 15.7 Summary and Conclusions 560 References and Additional Readings 563 16 Bankruptcy Costs and Debt Holder- Equity Holder Conflicts 566 16.1 Bankruptcy 56Ő Bankruptcy in the United Kingdom 56б Bankruptcy in Other Countries 569 The Direct Costs of Bankruptcy 569 16.2 Debt Holder-Equity Holder Conflicts: an Indirect Bankruptcy Cost 571 xiv Chapter Detailed Table of Contents Equity Holder Incentives 577 The Debt Overhang Problem 572 The Shortsighted Investment Problem 576 The Asset Substitution Problem 578 The Incentives of a Firm to Take Higher Risks: the Case of Unistar 578 How Do Debt Holders Respond to Shareholder Incentives? 579 The Reluctance to Liquidate Problem 585 16.3 How Administration Mitigates Debt Holder-Equity Holder Incentive Problems 588 16.4 How Can Firms Minimize Debt Holder-Equity Holder Incentive Problems? 589 Protective Covenants 590 Bank and Privately Placed Debt 592 The Use of Short-Term versus Long-Term Debt 593 Security Design: the Use of Convertibles 594 The Use of Project Financing 594 Management Compensation Contracts 595 16.5 Empirical Implications for Financing Choices 596 How Investment Opportunities Influence Financing Choices 596 How Financing Choices Influence Investment Choices 596 Firm Size and Financing Choices 597 Evidence from Bank-Based Economies 597 16.6 Summary and Conclusions 598 References and Additional Readings 602 17 Capital Structure and Corporate Strategy 606 17.1 The Stakeholder Theory of Capital Structure 60S Non-Financial Stakeholders 608 How the Costs Imposed on Stakeholders Affect the Capital Structure Choice 609 Financial Distress and Reputation 611 Who Would You Rather Work For? 6 73 Summary of the Stakeholder Theory 6 74 17.2 The Benefits of Financial Distress with Committed Stakeholders 6 75 Bargaining with Unions 6/5 Bargaining with the Government 6 76 17.3 Capital Structure and Competitive Strategy 6 77 Does Debt Make Firms More or Less Aggressive Competitors? 677 Debt and Prédation 618 Empirical Studies of the Relationship between Debt Financing and Market Share 679 17.4 Dynamic Capital Structure Considerations 62 7 The Pecking Order of Financing Choices 622 An Explanation Based on Management Incentives 623 An Explanation Based on Managers Having More Information than Investors 623 An Explanation Based on the Stakeholder Theory 623 An Explanation Based on Debt Holder-Equity Holder Conflicts 623 Market Timing Behaviour of Managers 625 17.5 Empirical Evidence on the Capital Structure Choice 625 Market Timing Versus Pecking Order 626 17.6 Summary and Conclusions 628 References and Additional Readings 63 7 PART V Incentives, Information and Corporate Control 18 How Managerial Incentives Affect Financial Decisions 639 18.1 The Separation of Ownership and Control 640 Whom Do Managers Represent? 64 7 What Factors Influence Managerial Incentives? 64 7 How Management Incentive Problems Hurt Shareholder Value 642 Why Shareholders Cannot Control Managers 642 Changes in Corporate Governance 645 Do Corporate Governance Problems Differ Across Countries? 647 18.2 Management Shareholdings and Market Value 647 The Effect of Management Shareholdings on Stock Prices 649 Management Shareholdings and Firm Value: The Empirical Evidence 650 18.3 How Management Control Distorts Investment Decisions 65 7 The Investment Choices Managers Prefer 65 7 Outside Shareholders and Managerial Discretion 653 18.4 Capital Structure and Managerial Control 654 The Relation between Shareholder Control and Leverage 654 How Leverage Affects the Level of Investment 655 A Monitoring Role for Banks 657 A Monitoring Role for Private Equity 65S Detailed Table of Contents xv 18.5 Executive Compensation 658 The Agency Problem 658 Is Executive Pay Closely Tied to Performance? 660 Post-Enron Changes 66/ How Does Firm Value Relate to the Use of Performance-Based Pay? 662 Is Executive Compensation Tied to Relative Performance? 663 Stock-Based versus Earnings-Based Performance Pay 663 Compensation Issues, Mergers and Divestitures 665 18.6 Summary and Conclusions 667 References and Additional Readings 670 19 The Information Conveyed by Financial Decisions 674 19.1 Management Incentives when Managers have Better Information than Shareholders 675 Conflicts between Short-Term and Long-Term Share Price Maximization 676 19.2 Earnings Manipulation 67S Incentives to Manipulate Accounting Figures 679 19.3 Shortsighted Investment Choices 679 Management s Reluctance to Undertake Long-Term Investments 6S0 What Determines a Manager s Incentive to be Shortsighted? 637 19.4 The Information Content of Dividend and Share Repurchase Announcements 681 Empirical Evidence on Stock Returns at the Time of Dividend Announcements 681 A Dividend Signalling Model 682 Dividend Policy and Investment Incentives 6Ő6 Dividends Attract Attention 688 Dividends across Countries 689 19.5 The Information Content of the Debt-Equity Choice 689 A Signalling Model Based on the Tax Gain/Financial Distress Cost Trade-Off 689 Adverse Selection Theory 69 7 19.6 Empirical Evidence 696 What is an Event Study? 696 Event Study Evidence 697 Behavioural Explanations 701 How Does the Availability of Cash Affect Investment Expenditures? 702 19.7 Summary and Conclusions 703 References and Additional Readings 707 20 Mergers and Acquisitions 20.1 A History of Mergers and Acquisitions 20.2 Types of Mergers and Acquisitions Strategic Acquisitions Financial Acquisitions Conglomerate Acquisitions 772 773 775 775 775 776 Summary of Mergers and Acquisitions 777 20.3 Recent Trends in Takeover Activity 777 The Fall and Rise of Hostile Takeovers 77S 20.4 Sources of Takeover Cains 77Ő Tax Motivations 779 Operating Synergies 720 Is an Acquisition Required to Realize Tax Gains, Operating Synergies, Incentive Gains or Diversification? 725 20.5 The Disadvantages of Mergers and Acquisitions 725 Conglomerates Can Misal locate Capital 726 Mergers Can Reduce the Information Contained in Stock Prices 726 A Summary of the Gains and Costs of Diversification 726 20.6 Empirical Evidence on Takeover Gains for Non-LBO Takeovers 727 Stock Returns around the Time of Takeover Announcements 727 Empirical Evidence on the Gains to Diversification 730 Accounting Studies 730 20.7 Empirical Evidence on the Gains from Leveraged Buyouts (LBOs) 73 7 How Leveraged Buyouts Affect Stock Prices 732 Cash Flow Changes Following Leveraged Buyouts 732 20.8 Valuing Acquisitions 734 Valuing Synergies 734 A Guide to the Valuation of Synergies 735 20.9 Financing Acquisitions 738 Tax Implications of the Financing of a Merger or an Acquisition 739 Capital Structure Implications in the Financing of a Merger or an Acquisition 739 Information Effects from the Financing of a Merger or an Acquisition 739 20.10 Bidding Strategies in Hostile Takeovers 740 The Free-Rider Problem 740 Solutions to the Free-Rider Problem 74 7 20.11 Management Defences 744 Greenmail 744 Staggered Boards and Supermajority Rules 744 xvi Chapter Detailed Table of Contents Poison Pills 744 Are Takeover Defences Good for Shareholders? 745 20.12 Summary and Conclusions 746 References and Additional Readings 749 PART IV Risk Management 21 Risk Management and Corporate Strategy 757 21.1 Risk Management and the Modigliani-Miller Theorem 758 The Investor s Hedging Choice 758 Implications of the Modigliani-Miller Theorem for Hedging 759 Relaxing the Modigliani-Miller Assumptions 759 21.2 Why Do Firms Hedge? 760 A Simple Analogy 760 How Does Hedging Increase Expected Cash Flows? 76/ How Hedging Reduces Taxes 762 Hedging to Avoid Financial Distress Costs 762 Hedging to Help Firms Plan for their Capital Needs 764 How Hedging Improves Executive Compensation Contracts and Performance Evaluation 766 How Hedging Improves Decision Making 768 21.3 The Motivation to Hedge Affects What is Hedged 771 21.4 How Should Companies Organize their Hedging Activities? 771 21.5 Do Risk Management Departments Always Hedge? 772 21.6 How Hedging Affects the Firm s Stakeholders 773 How Hedging Affects Debt Holders and Equity Holders 773 How Hedging Affects Employees and Customers 773 Hedging and Managerial Incentives 773 21.7 The Motivation to Manage Interest Rate Risk 774 Alternative Liability Streams 775 How do Corporations Choose between Different Liability Streams? 776 21.8 Foreign Exchange Risk Management 778 Types of Foreign Exchange Risk 778 Why do Exchange Rates Change? 779 Why Most Firms do not Hedge Economic Risk 782 21.9 Which Firms Hedge? The Empirical Evidence 783 Larger Firms are More Likely than Smaller Firms to Use Derivatives 783 Firms with More Growth Opportunities are More Likely to Use Derivatives 783 Highly Levered Firms are More Likely to Use Derivatives 784 Risk Management Practices in the Gold Mining Industry 784 Risk Management Practices in the Oil and Gas Industry 784 21.10 Summary and Conclusions 785 References and Additional Readings 788 22 The Practice of Hedging 790 22.1 Measuring Risk Exposure 791 Using Regression to Estimate the Risk Exposure 792 Measuring Risk Exposure with Simulations 7.92 Prespecification of Factor Betas from Theoretical Relations 793 Volatility as a Measure of Risk Exposure 793 Value at Risk as a Measure of Risk Exposure 794 22.2 Hedging Short-Term Commitments with Maturity-Matched Forward Contracts 795 Review of Forward Contracts 795 How Forward-Date Obligations Create Risk 796 Using Forwards to Eliminate the Oil Price Risk of Forward Obligations 796 Using Forward Contracts to Hedge Currency Obligations 797 22.3 Hedging Short-Term Commitments with Maturity-Matched Futures Contracts 799 Review of Futures Contracts, Marking to Market and Futures Prices 799 Tailing the Futures Hedge 799 22.4 Hedging and Convenience Yields 801 When Convenience Yields do not Affect Hedge Ratios 802 How Supply and Demand for Convenience Determine Convenience Yields 802 Hedging the Risk from Holding Spot Positions in Commodities with Convenience Yields 803 22.5 Hedging Long-Dated Commitments with Short-Maturing Futures or Forward Contracts 804 Maturity, Risk and Hedging in the Presence of a Constant Convenience Yield 805 Detailed Table of Contents xvii Quantitative Estimates of the Oil Futures Stack Hedge Error 807 Intuition for Hedging with a Maturity Mismatch in the Presence of a Constant Convenience Yield 808 Convenience Yield Risk Generated by Correlation between Spot Prices and Convenience Yields 808 Basis Risk 810 22.6 Hedging with Swaps 811 Review of Swaps 811 Hedging with Interest Rate Swaps 811 Hedging with Currency Swaps 813 22.7 Hedging with Options 814 Why Option Hedging is Desirable 815 Covered Option Hedging: Caps and Floors 815 Delta Hedging with Options 818 22.8 Factor-Based Hedging 820 Computing Factor Betas for Cash Flow Combinations 820 Computing Hedge Ratios 821 Direct Hedge Ratio Computations: Solving Systems of Equations 821 22.9 Hedging with Regression 823 Hedging a Cash Flow with a Single Financial Instrument 823 Hedging with Multiple Regression 824 22.10 Minimum Variance Portfolios and Mean-Variance Analysis 825 Hedging to Arrive at the Minimum Variance Portfolio 825 Hedging to Arrive at the Tangency Portfolio 826 22.11 Summary and Conclusions 828 References and Additional Readings 833 23 Interest Rate Risk Management 834 23.1 The Value of a One Basis Point Decrease (PV01) 835 Methods Used to Compute PV01 for Traded Bonds 836 Using PV01 to Estimate Price Changes 837 PV01s of Various Bond Types and Portfolios 837 Using PVOH to Hedge Interest Rate Risk 838 How Compounding Frequency Affects the Stated PV0 1 839 23.2 Duration 840 The Duration of Zero-Coupon Bonds 840 The Duration of Coupon Bonds 841 Durations of Discount and Premium- Coupon Bonds 842 How Duration Changes as Time Elapses 842 Durations of Bond Portfolios 843 How Duration Changes as Interest Rates Increase 843 23.3 Linking Duration to PV01 844 Duration as a Derivative 844 Formulas Relating Duration to PV01 846 Hedging with PV01s or Durations 847 23.4 Immunization 848 Ordinary Immunization 848 Immunization Using PVO 7 851 Practical Issues to Consider 851 Contingent Immunization 852 Immunization and Large Changes in Interest Rates 853 23.5 Convexity 853 Defining and Interpreting Convexity 853 Estimating Price Sensitivity to Yield 855 Misuse of Convexity 855 23.6 Interest Rate Hedging when the Term Structure is Not Flat 859 The Yield-Beta Solution 859 The Parallel Term Structure Shift Solution: Term Structure PVO 7 860 MacAuley Duration and Present Value Duration 860 Present Value Duration as a Derivative 862 23.7 Summary and Conclusions 863 References and Additional Readings 865 Appendix A Mathematical Tables 870 Practical Insights for Financial Managers 880 Index 883
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author Hillier, David 1962-
Grinblatt, Mark
Titman, Sheridan 1954-
author_GND (DE-588)121781615
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author_facet Hillier, David 1962-
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Titman, Sheridan 1954-
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building Verbundindex
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dewey-full 658.15
dewey-hundreds 600 - Technology (Applied sciences)
dewey-ones 658 - General management
dewey-raw 658.15
dewey-search 658.15
dewey-sort 3658.15
dewey-tens 650 - Management and auxiliary services
discipline Wirtschaftswissenschaften
edition European Edition
format Book
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publisher McGraw-Hill Irwin
record_format marc
spellingShingle Hillier, David 1962-
Grinblatt, Mark
Titman, Sheridan 1954-
Financial markets and corporate strategy
Financiering gtt
Financiële instellingen gtt
Strategische planning gtt
Business planning
Corporations Finance
Financial institutions
Strategic planning
Finanzierung (DE-588)4017182-6 gnd
Kapitalmarkt (DE-588)4029578-3 gnd
Strategische Planung (DE-588)4309237-8 gnd
Kreditmarkt (DE-588)4073788-3 gnd
Unternehmensplanung (DE-588)4078609-2 gnd
Unternehmen (DE-588)4061963-1 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4017182-6
(DE-588)4029578-3
(DE-588)4309237-8
(DE-588)4073788-3
(DE-588)4078609-2
(DE-588)4061963-1
(DE-588)4078704-7
(DE-588)4015701-5
(DE-588)4123623-3
title Financial markets and corporate strategy
title_auth Financial markets and corporate strategy
title_exact_search Financial markets and corporate strategy
title_full Financial markets and corporate strategy David Hillier, Mark Grinblatt and Sheridan Titman
title_fullStr Financial markets and corporate strategy David Hillier, Mark Grinblatt and Sheridan Titman
title_full_unstemmed Financial markets and corporate strategy David Hillier, Mark Grinblatt and Sheridan Titman
title_short Financial markets and corporate strategy
title_sort financial markets and corporate strategy
topic Financiering gtt
Financiële instellingen gtt
Strategische planning gtt
Business planning
Corporations Finance
Financial institutions
Strategic planning
Finanzierung (DE-588)4017182-6 gnd
Kapitalmarkt (DE-588)4029578-3 gnd
Strategische Planung (DE-588)4309237-8 gnd
Kreditmarkt (DE-588)4073788-3 gnd
Unternehmensplanung (DE-588)4078609-2 gnd
Unternehmen (DE-588)4061963-1 gnd
topic_facet Financiering
Financiële instellingen
Strategische planning
Business planning
Corporations Finance
Financial institutions
Strategic planning
Finanzierung
Kapitalmarkt
Strategische Planung
Kreditmarkt
Unternehmensplanung
Unternehmen
Verenigde Staten
USA
Europa
Lehrbuch
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AT grinblattmark financialmarketsandcorporatestrategy
AT titmansheridan financialmarketsandcorporatestrategy
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