Corporate finance /
Stephen A. Ross et.al.,
- 13th ed.
- New York: McGraw Hill, 2022.
- xxxii, 1022 pages : Color Illustrations ; 26 cm.
Includes Index.
Introduction to Corporate Finance Financial Statements and Cash Flow Financial Statements Analysis and Financial Models Discounted Cash Flow Valuation Net Present Value and Other Investment Rules Making Capital Investment Decisions Risk Analysis, Real Options, and Capital Budgeting Interest Rates and Bond Valuation Stock Valuation Lessons from Market History Return, Risk, and the Capital Asset Pricing Model An Alternative View of Risk and Return Risk, Cost of Capital, and Valuation Efficient Capital Markets and Behavioral Challenges Long-Term Financing Capital Structure: Basic Concepts Capital Structure: Limits to the Use of Debt Valuation and Capital Budgeting for the Levered Firm Dividends and Other Payouts Raising Capital Leasing Options and Corporate Finance Options and Corporate Finance: Extensions and Applications Warrants and Convertibles Derivatives and Hedging Risk Short-Term Finance and Planning Cash Management Credit and Inventory Management Mergers, Acquisitions, and Divestitures Financial Distress International Corporate Finance
Corporate Finance, by Ross, Westerfield, Jaffe, and Jordan, was written for the corporate finance course at the MBA level and the intermediate course in many undergraduate programs. The text emphasizes the modern fundamentals of the theory of finance while providing contemporary examples to make the theory come to life. The authors aim to present corporate finance as the working of a small number of integrated and powerful intuitions rather than a collection of unrelated topics. They develop the central concepts of modern finance: arbitrage, net present value, efficient markets, agency theory, options, and the trade-off between risk and return, and use them to explain corporate finance with a balance of theory and application. The 13th edition also welcomes a special contributor, Professor Kelly Shue of Yale University.