Principles of Finance with Excel
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Product details:
- Publisher Oxford University Press
- Date of Publication 16 February 2006
- ISBN 9780195301502
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages924 pages
- Size 242x195x39 mm
- Weight 1655 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Principles of Finance with Excel is the first finance text that comprehensively integrates Excel into the teaching and practice of finance. In today's world, the practice of finance goes hand-in-hand with Excel. Using a spreadsheet gives new and deeper insights into financial decision making. The ability to combine graphics with computation, the powerful functions incorporated into the spreadsheet, and the ease with which sensitivity analysis can be done-all these give
potent insights into financial problems. Principles of Finance with Excel provides an integrated approach to finance and Excel which will benefit both students and finance professionals.
Long description:
Principles of Finance with Excel is the first finance text that comprehensively integrates Excel into the teaching and practice of finance.
Finance is inherently a topic requiring lots of computation and in today's business world this computation is almost wholly carried out in Excel. Despite this, many books rely heavily on hand calculators, and business school students often find that when they leave the academic environment they have to relearn both finance and Excel.
The Excel-based approach of Principles of Finance with Excel gives better tools to the instructor and the student and integrates the educational message with the most useful financial tool available. There are no financial calculator examples in Principles of Finance with Excel, just Excel. The resulting message is clear: The Practice of Finance goes hand-in-hand with Excel. As every Excel user knows, a spreadsheet is not just a "computational tool", a slightly more
sophisticated twist on the calculator. Using a spreadsheet gives new and deeper insights into financial decision making. The ability to combine graphics with computation, the powerful functions incorporated into the spreadsheet, and the ease with which sensitivity analysis can be done-all these give potent insights into
financial problems.
Table of Contents:
Preface
Section 1: Introductory Chapters
Introduction to Finance
Business Organization and Taxes
Basic Accounting Concepts
Cash Management
Section 2: Capital Budgeting and Valuation
Time Value of Money
What does it cost?
Basics of Capital Budgeting
More Issues in Capital Budgeting
The Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)
Using Financial Planning Models for Valuation
Section 3: Portfolio Analysis and the Capital Asset Pricing Model
What is Risk?
An Introduction to Portfolio Statistics
Portfolio Returns and the Efficient Frontier
The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and the Security Market Line (SML)
Using the SML to Measure Performance
Using the SML for Cost of Capital Calculations
Section 4: Valuing Securities
Market Efficiency
Bond Valuation
Share Valuation
Section 5: Capital Structure and Dividend Policy
Capital Structure and the Value of the Firm-Theory
Capital Structure and the Value of the Firm-Practical Implications
Dividend Policy
Section 6: Options and Option Valuation
Introduction to Options
Properties of Option Prices
Valuing Options-The Black-Scholes Formula
Valuing Options-The Binomial Model
Section 7: Background to Excel
Starting Off in Excel
Graphing in Excel
Common Excel Functions
Using Data Tables
Dates in Excel
Goal Seek and Solver
Data Manipulation in Excel
Word and Excel