PART 7: SHORT-TERM FINANCIAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENTĬHAPTER 18: Short-Term Finance and PlanningĬHAPTER 19: Cash and Liquidity ManagementĬHAPTER 20: Credit and Inventory ManagementĬHAPTER 21: International Corporate FinanceĬHAPTER 22: Behavioral Finance: Implications for Financial Manage PART 6: COST OF CAPITAL AND LONG-TERM FINANCIAL POLICYĬHAPTER 16: Financial Leverage and Capital Structure Policy PART 2: Financial Statements and Long-Term Financial PlanningĬHAPTER 3: Working with Financial StatementsĬHAPTER 4: Long-Term Financial Planning and GrowthĬHAPTER 5: Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of MoneyĬHAPTER 6: Discounted Cash Flow ValuationĬHAPTER 7: Interest Rates and Bond ValuationĬHAPTER 9: Net Present Value and Other Investment CriteriaĬHAPTER 10: Making Capital Investment DecisionsĬHAPTER 11: Project Analysis and EvaluationĬHAPTER 12: Some Lessons from Capital Market HistoryĬHAPTER 13: Return, Risk, And the Security Market Line The best-selling text has three basic themes that are the central focus of the book:ġ) An emphasis on intuition: the authors separate and explain the principles at work on a common sense, intuitive level before launching into any specifics.Ģ) A unified valuation approach: net present value (NPV) is treated as the basic concept underlying corporate finance.ģ) A managerial focus: the authors emphasize the role of the financial manager as a decision maker, and they stress the need for managerial input and judgment.ĬHAPTER 1: Introduction to Corporate FinanceĬHAPTER 2: Financial Statements, Taxes, And Cash Flow
The organization of this text has been developed to give instructors the flexibility they need. The text is nearly self-contained in terms of background or prerequisites, assuming some familiarity with basic algebra and accounting concepts, while still reviewing important accounting principles very early on.
Stephen Ross and Randolph Westerfield and Bradford Jordan Fundamentals of Corporate Finance 13 Ma9781260772395įundamentals of Corporate Finance was designed and developed for a first course in business or corporate finance, for both finance majors and non-majors alike.