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- Wiley
More About This Title Finance for Strategic Decision Making: What Non-Financial Managers Need to Know
- English
English
- Explains the role of finance in corporate strategy
- Offers guidance on resource allocation decisions
- Explores how to determine the right balance of debt and equity capital to maximize firm value
- Demonstrates how to use payout policy as a strategic tool
- Clarifies if a merger, acquisition, or divestiture is in the best interest of an organization
- Shows how to manage risk
Reveals how to measure value created and the effectiveness of upper level management
- English
English
Vikram K. Nanda is associate professor of finance at the University of Michigan Business School.
- English
English
Series Foreword xi
Preface xiii
1 Finance and Corporate Strategy 1
2 The Resource Allocation Decision 13
3 Cost of Capital 55
4 Capital Structure and Financing 75
5 Payout Policy 113
6 Mergers and Acquisitions 137
7 Divestitures 179
8 Risk Management 211
9 Performance Evaluation 247
Notes 285
The Authors 291
Index 293
- English
English
—Joao Luis Barroso, vice president, Portugal Telecom, Brazil
“M. P. and Vikram boil down thirty years of teaching executives the subject of finance into an easy-to-read overview. This book is ideal for someone ready to transform their finance understanding from a point of unconnected concepts into a fundamental framework of finance.”
—Mark Lund, Procter and Gamble Research & Development
“This is ‘must know’ stuff for leaders stepping into the realm of corporate decision making. M. P. Narayanan lays out a crystal-clear framework that I used to substantially improve project selection and strategy reviews.”
—Don McMonagle, former astronaut and director of strategy and development, Pratt & Whitney Space Propulsion
“M. P. Narayanan uses his engineering background to create an educational ex perience that might be called ‘Applied Finance.’ The book does not bog down the reader with financial theories, but rather uses the context of real business situations to bring to light the appropriate application of finance principles.”
—David C. Poirier, graduate, University of Michigan Executive MBA Class of 2003 graduate