Corporate finance
Corporate Finance is a specific area of finance dealing with the financial decisions corporations make and the tools as well as analyses used to make these decisions. The discipline as a whole may be divided among long-term and short-term decisions and techniques with the primary goal being the enhancing of corporate value by ensuring that return on capital exceeds cost of capital, without taking excessive financial risks.
Related Topics:
Finance - Corporations - Return on capital - Cost of capital
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Capital investment decisions comprise the long-term choices about which projects receive investment, whether to finance that investment with equity or debt, and when or whether to pay dividends to shareholders. Short-term corporate finance decisions are called working capital management and deal with balance of current assets and current liabilities by managing cash, inventories, and short-term borrowing and lending (e.g., the credit terms extended to customers).
Related Topics:
Equity - Debt - Dividends - Current assets - Current liabilities
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Corporate finance is closely related to managerial finance, which is slightly broader in scope, describing the financial techniques available to all forms of business enterprise, corporate or not.
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Capital investment decisions |
| ► | Working capital management |
| ► | Financial risk management |
| ► | Relationship with other areas in finance |
| ► | Related articles |
| ► | External links and references |
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