| |
Shop
| |  |
|
 Best Sellers
|  | Home  Financial Markets & Corporate Strategy | |
|  | |  | | | Financial Markets & Corporate Strategy | | | | | SKU:
ACOUK_book_new_0072294337 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1-2 business days | | | | | | The authors began writing the First Edition of this textbook in early 1988. It took almost 10 years to complete this effort, because they did not want to write an ordinary textbook. Their goal was to write a book that would break new ground in both the understanding and explanation of finance and its practice. They wanted to write a book that would influence the way people think about, teach, and practice finance. A book that would elevate the level of discussion and analysis in the classroom, in the corporate boardroom, and in the conference rooms of Wall Street firms. They wanted a book that would sit on the shelves of financial executives as a useful reference manual, long after the executives had studied and received a degree. They were successful in their endeavor. The success of the first edition of Financial Markets and Corporate Strategy was very heartening. The market for this text has expanded every year, and it is well-known as the cutting edge textbook in corporate finance around the world. The book is used in a variety of courses, both for introductory courses and advanced electives. Some schools have even changed their curriculum to design it around this text. The authors have developed this Second Edition based on the comments of many reviewers and colleagues; producing what is a more reader-friendly book. The most consistent comment from users of the first edition was a request for a chapter on the key ingredients of valuation: accounting, cash flows, and basic discounting. This ultimately led to a new chapter in the text, Chapter 9, which is currently available in the "Sample Chapter" section of the book's website. In almost every chapter, examples are updated, vignettes changed, numbers modified, statements checked for currency and historical accuracy, and exercises and examples are either modified or added to. The goal of the Second Edition is to make the book ever more practical, pedagogically effective, and current. | | | |
List Price:
| | |
Our Price:
| $38.20 | |
You Save:
| |
| | |
|
| | Product Details | | Author: | Mark Grinblatt | | Hardcover: | 912 pages | | Publisher: | McGraw-Hill/Irwin | | Publication Date: | October 16, 2001 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0072294337 | | Product Width: | 207.75 centimeters | | Product Height: | 257.75 centimeters | | Product Weight: | 3.9 pounds | | Package Length: | 10.2 inches | | Package Width: | 8.3 inches | | Package Height: | 1.6 inches | | Package Weight: | 3.7 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 19 reviews |
|  |
| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 19 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 found the following review helpful:
A Wonderful Approach to Corporate Finance Apr 12, 2005
By longhorn24
"longhorn24"
I will admit this book does not take the standard approach to learning corporate finance. The authors discuss a wide variety of common topics, ranging from market models, option valuation, capital structure concepts and decisions, to more specialized topics such as corporate governance and financial risk management.
What is unique about this book, though, is that the authors encourage students to think about problems more broadly than one often sees in introductory texts and courses. For example, the authors encourage the use of decision trees (i.e. binomial models) to value a wide range of assets, not just stocks. If one can value a stock option using a binomial tree, why not use the same framework to value a plot of undeveloped real estate, an untapped mine, or any other "real option" owned by a company?
Another reason this text is excellent is because the authors include a vast survey of recent financial and economic literature relevant for the financial decision-maker. Highly developed markets depend on the signaling of information between investors and management, creditors and debtors, customers and suppliers, and so forth; understanding the implications of these interactions and their subsequent effects is of primary importance to decision-makers.
For example, the "pecking order" theory of capital structure is one of the most well-known concepts in finance, but nonetheless often misunderstood (if you want proof of this, why did investors respond so enthusiastically to every IPO in the late 1990's?). Instead of glossing over an explanation of the theory, the book thorougly explains it and provides problems where the reader can actually work through a simplified model that really reinforces the concept.
While this book served as a good introduction to a wide scope of problems in finance, it was most useful because it helped me to apply economic tools not just to solve but to understand financial problems. The use of decision trees in the simplified, binomial model setting helped me to understand option/project valuation and risk-netural valuation, the linchpin of no-arbitrage pricing. It also has perhaps the most thorough, lucid explanation of Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) I've seen anywhere- for a practitioner trying to understand factor models, this chapter alone makes the book worth it.
I understand that this is a very difficult book and that the problems are beyond what one may expect in a MBA-level course. Nonetheless, finance is an increasingly competitive field whose employers are starting to demand more analytical skills and intiution from recent graduates. In response to the reviewer who said this text is not suitable for CFA preparation, I do agree with that sentiment. First, the CFA program is designed for self-study that any motivated and capable professional can handle, while Grinblatt/Titman is clearly appropriate for a rigorous MBA-level sequence in corporate finance. Second, the CFA exam emphasizes asset valuation and portfolio management, while this book stresses financial decision-making from a manager's standpoint.
While I normally don't like reviews that justify their opinions by offering credentials, I also work on Wall Street and I find the concepts taught in this book to be quite relevant in handling real-world problems.
7 of 7 found the following review helpful:
Good basic overview of finance intersecting corp strategy Feb 25, 2005
By Craig Matteson I bought this book as a recommended supplemental text for a course in Corporate Finance in the MBA program at the U of Michigan Business School. I am very glad to have this book on my shelf of financial books and have benefited from it more than once.
I can recommend it to you strongly by praising it for these reasons:
1) It puts practical flesh on the financial model bones you learned in your first course on finance. There are very good discussions of the basic and well-known fundamental theories and models, but the authors also share with us what tends to happen in the real world. And isn't that what each of us need to add to our theoretical thinking?
2) Each chapter has effective summarizing Key Concepts and Key Terms with plenty of problems to work through and a list of References and Additional Readings that enable the reader to dive deeper into the topic of the chapter just read.
3) The book is helpfully organized into six Parts that provide the framework for the discussion. Parts 1-3 are a review of "Financial Markets and Instruments", "Valuing Financial Assets", and "Valuing Real Assets". This foundation gives the student a good grounding in order to see how these principles are used in the work of managing the capital structure of a corporation. Parts 4-6 discuss the "Corporate Financial Structure", "Incentives, Information and Corporate Control", and "Risk Management". These last three sections are the real meat of the book and where a great deal of its value to the business student lies.
4) Each of the Parts has an effective and brief introduction that sets the tone for what is to be studied. Even better, at the end of each the six Parts there are two very helpful summary sections: "Practical Insights" and "Executive Perspective".
This is a specialized topic. But it is an important topic. This is a very good book that can help a serious student get grounded in some very important principals necessary to managing the financial issues facing every corporation. I recommend it.
15 of 19 found the following review helpful:
A finance textbook full of errors and holes May 06, 2005
By N. Shah I am a postgraduate student in finance and this book is on my reading list for corporate finance. I must say that I am not very pleased with this book. First, it seems to skip around from chapter to chapter with no real logical organizational structure. Second, it is full of typos and mistakes -- some that are quite dangerous for a proper understanding of the material. Third, it does not develop fully the statistically techniques in Chapter 4 that it builds on in later chapters. This is a major problem in my opinion. What saves this book from the lowest rating is that it does discuss empirical studies and journal articles, and it does not do an entirely awful job about the more qualitative subjects like adverse selection and capitalization policy.
For what it's worth, I received my undergraduate degree at Wharton and am now at the London School of Economics. Instead of this book, I recommend Brealey and Myer's Principles of Corporate Finance. This is what I used as an undergraduate and is what seems to be the de facto textbook in the top undergraduate and MBA programs.
N.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Good comprehensive text for corporate finance. Dec 06, 1998 I used parts of this book in finance courses at the University of Connecticut and found it to be clear, concise, and quite readable. The numerical examples were useful, if occasionally a bit disjointed. I would recommend the book as a good MBA level text.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
A practitioner's book Apr 26, 2011
By B. Prasad
"b.prasad"
This was one of the supplemental finance texts required during my MBA course and is by far one of the most complete and practice oriented texts in the subject. . Make no mistake, this is not an introductory text. The author's quickly glance over basic corporate finance - NPV, Debt/Equity financing and the like. Where the book starts shining, is in the 2nd part where one see's an excellent treatment of Portfolio Management moving into CAPM and then onward to Multi-factor models and Arbitrage Pricing Theory. The latter is probably the best introduction that I have seen to tracking portfolios and factor betas. The authors encourage you to apply these concepts with practical, thought-provoking problems that any asset manager is likely to tackle on a daily basis. Part 2 ends with an intermediate level treatment of derivatives like futures and forwards. This basis is recommended before diving into the John Hull's book. The author's then move on to discuss a wide breadth of advanced topics from asset valuation, bankruptcy financing, and Mergers and Acquisition and interest rate risk hedging. Each chapter is chock full of great problems that force you to go back to the text and try to apply the concepts demonstrated by clearly worked-out examples.
In the broader landscape of Finance books, I would place it on the same pedestal as Damodaran's excellent book on Valuation and Hull's classic reference on Options. You cannot go wrong making an investment in this book.
See all 19 customer reviews on Amazon.com
|  |
| |
| |  | |  |
|
 Recently Viewed |  You may also like ...
|