For upper-division undergraduate and MBA students as well as business professionals.Seeing the economic realities of the modern corporation through an integrated approach.Titman/Martin presents an integrated approach to both project and enterprise valuation, showing readers the economic realities that today’s modern corporations face. This text also goes beyond standard DCF analysis by including additional valuation methods that are commonly used in practice, such as comparables, simulations, and real [...] second edition includes an increased emphasis on enterprise valuation, a new chapter on financial forecasting, and enhanced examples and illustrations.
For upper-division undergraduate and MBA students as well as business professionals.Seeing the economic realities of the modern corporation through an integrated approach.Titman/Martin presents an integrated approach to both project and enterprise valuation, showing readers the economic realities that today’s modern corporations face. This text also goes beyond standard DCF analysis by including additional valuation methods that are commonly used in practice, such as comparables, simulations, and real [...] second edition includes an increased emphasis on enterprise valuation, a new chapter on financial forecasting, and enhanced examples and illustrations.
Über den Autor
About our authors Sheridan Titman is the McAllister Centennial Chair in Financial Services at the University of Texas at Austin and a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Texas, he was a Professor at UCLA, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and Boston College. In addition to his academic experience, Sheridan spent the 1988 to 89 academic year in Washington, DC as the special assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy and has done occasional consulting with financial institutions. His research covers a broad range of topics and has been recognized by a number of awards, including the Smith-Breeden best paper award for the Journal of Finance, the GSAM best paper award for the Review of Finance, and the Wharton-Jacobs Levy Prize for Quantitative Financial Innovation. Sheridan has been active in the leading academic associations, having served as President of the Western Finance Association, the American Finance Association and the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association, as well as a Director of the American Finance Association, the Western Finance Association, the Financial Management Association and the Asia Pacific Finance Association. Arthur J. Keown is an Alumni Distinguished Professor and the R. B. Pamplin Professor of Finance at Virginia Tech. He received his bachelor's degree from Ohio Wesleyan University, his MBA from the University of Michigan, and his doctorate from Indiana University. An award-winning teacher, he is a member of the Academy of Teaching Excellence at Virginia Tech. He has received 5 certificates of Teaching Excellence, the W.E. Wine Award for Teaching Excellence, and the Alumni Teaching Excellence Award. In 1999, he received the Outstanding Faculty Award from the State of Virginia. Professor Keown is widely published in academic journals. His work has appeared in the Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economics, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Journal of Financial Research, Journal of Banking and Finance, Financial Management, Journal of Portfolio Management, and many others. Two of his books, Foundations of Finance: The Logic and Practice of Financial Management, and Personal Finance: Turning Money into Wealth, are widely used in college finance classes all over the country. Professor Keown is a Fellow in the Decision Sciences Institute, and has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Financial Management Association. In addition, he has served as the co-editor of both the Journal of Financial Research and the Financial Management Association's Survey and Synthesis Series. He was recently inducted into Ohio Wesleyan's Athletic Hall of Fame for wrestling. He has 2 children, 3 granddaughters and lives with his wife in Blacksburg, Virginia, where he collects original art from Mad Magazine. John D. Martin is professor emeritus at Baylor University where he was the Carr P. Collins Chair of finance and is also a retired professor of finance from the University of Texas at Austin where he held the Margaret and Eugene McDermott Professorship in Finance. He now lives on a ranch near Crawford, TX where he and his wife raise Braunvieh-Angus cattle, bale hay and enjoy a pastoral life. In his prior life as a finance professor John taught for almost a half century earning a number of teaching awards, published over 90 articles in the leading finance journals, and coauthored 10 books including Financial Management: Principles and Practice (14th edition, Pearson), Foundations of Finance (10th edition Pearson), Valuation: The Art and Science of Corporate Investment Decisions (3rd edition, Pearson) and Value Based Management with Social Responsibility (2nd edition, Oxford University Press). When not involved in farming and ranching John feeds his learning habit by remaining an active researcher and writer. His current research inte
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1. Overview of Valuation
PART I: Project Analysis Using Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
Chapter 2. Forecasting and Valuing Cash Flows
Chapter 3. Project Risk Analysis
PART II: Cost of Capital
Chapter 4. Estimating a Firm’s Cost of Capital
Chapter 5. Estimating Required Rates of Return for Projects
PART III: Financial Statements and Valuation
Chapter 6. Forecasting Financial Performance
Chapter 7. Earnings Dilution, Incentive Compensation, and Project Selection
PART IV: Enterprise Valuation
Chapter 8. Relative Valuation Using Market Comparables
Chapter 9. Enterprise Valuation
Chapter 10. Valuation in a Private Equity Setting
PART V: Futures, Options, and the Valuation of Real Investments
Chapter 11. Using Futures and Options to Value Real Investments
Chapter 12. Managerial Flexibility and Project Valuation: Real Options