Intermediate Financial Management 12th Edition Brigham Test Bank

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Intermediate Financial Management 12th Edition Brigham Test Bank.

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Intermediate Financial Management 12th Edition Brigham Test Bank

Product details:

  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1305720105
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1305720107
  • Author: Dr. Eugene F. Brigham

The only textbook written specifically for Intermediate or Advanced Corporate Finance courses, Brigham/Daves’ INTERMEDIATE FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, 12E equips students with a solid understanding of both conceptual theories and practical financial skills. Offering a clear presentation, this comprehensive text from renowned author team Gene Brigham and Phillip Daves reinforces coverage from earlier corporate finance courses while providing new, progressive material to challenge even the most advanced learners. The authors use corporate valuation as a unifying theme to emphasize the theoretic groundwork for value maximization and the practical skills to analyze business decisions. The book’s reader-friendly approach incorporates actual business examples and integrated cases as well as Excel spreadsheet models to demonstrate how financial theory in practice leads to solid financial decisions.

Table contents:

  1. Part I: Fundamental Concepts of Corporate Finance
  2. Ch 1: An Overview of Financial Management and the Financial Environment
  3. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  4. 1-1: How to Use this Text
  5. Box: The Global Economic Crisis
  6. Box: Columbus Was Wrong-The World Is Flat! And Hot! And Crowded!
  7. 1-2: The Corporate Life Cycle
  8. 1-3: The Primary Objective of the Corporation: Value Maximization
  9. Box: Ethics for Individuals and Businesses
  10. Box: Corporate Scandals and Maximizing Stock Price
  11. 1-4: An Overview of the Capital Allocation Process
  12. 1-5: Financial Securities
  13. 1-6: The Cost of Money
  14. 1-7: The Global Economic Crisis
  15. Box: Global Economic Crisis- Anatomy of a Toxic Asset
  16. 1-8: The Big Picture
  17. 1-9: e-Resources
  18. Ch 1: Summary
  19. Ch 2: Risk and Return: Part I
  20. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  21. 2-1: Investment Returns and Risk
  22. Box: Intrinsic Value, Risk, and Return
  23. 2-2: Measuring Risk for Discrete Distributions
  24. 2-3: Risk in a Continuous Distribution
  25. 2-4: Using Historical Data to Estimate Risk
  26. Box: What does Risk Really Mean?
  27. Box: The Historic Trade-Off between Risk and Return
  28. 2-5: Risk in a Portfolio Context
  29. 2-6: The Relevant Risk of a Stock: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
  30. Box: The Benefits of Diversifying Overseas
  31. 2-7: The Relationship between Risk and Return in the Capital Asset Pricing Model
  32. 2-8: The Efficient Markets Hypothesis
  33. Box: Another Kind of Risk: The Bernie Madoff Story
  34. 2-9: The Fama-French Three-Factor Model
  35. 2-10: Behavioral Finance
  36. 2-11: The CAPM and Market Efficiency: Implications for Corporate Managers and Investors
  37. Summary
  38. Ch 3: Risk and Return: Part II
  39. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  40. Box: Intrinsic Value, Risk, and Return
  41. 3-1: Efficient Portfolios
  42. 3-2: Choosing the Optimal Portfolio
  43. 3-3: The Basic Assumptions of the Capital Asset Pricing Model
  44. 3-4: The Capital Market Line and the Security Market Line
  45. Box: Skill or Luck?
  46. 3-5: Calculating Beta Coefficients
  47. 3-6: Empirical Tests of the CAPM
  48. 3-7: Arbitrage Pricing Theory
  49. Summary
  50. Ch 4: Bond Valuation
  51. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  52. Box: Intrinsic Value and the Cost of Debt
  53. 4-1: Who Issues Bonds?
  54. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Betting with or Against the U.S. Government: The Case of Treasury B
  55. 4-2: Key Characteristics of Bonds
  56. 4-3: Bond Valuation
  57. 4-4: Changes in Bond Values Over Time
  58. Box: Drinking Your Coupons
  59. 4-5: Bonds with Semiannual Coupons
  60. 4-6: Bond Yields
  61. 4-7: The Pre-Tax Cost of Debt: Determinants of Market Interest Rates
  62. 4-8: The Real Risk-Free Rate of Interest, r*
  63. 4-9: The Inflation Premium (IP)
  64. 4-10: The Nominal, or Quoted, Risk-Free Rate of Interest, rRF
  65. 4-11: The Default Risk Premium (DRP)
  66. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Insuring with Credit Default Swaps: Let the Buyer Beware!
  67. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- U.S. Treasury Bonds Downgraded!
  68. Box: The Few, the Proud, the … AAA-Rated Companies!
  69. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Fear and Rationality
  70. 4-12: The Liquidity Premium (LP)
  71. 4-13: The Maturity Risk Premium (MRP)
  72. 4-14: The Term Structure of Interest Rates
  73. 4-15: Financing with Junk Bonds
  74. 4-16: Bankruptcy and Reorganization
  75. Summary
  76. Ch 5: Financial Options
  77. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  78. Box: The Intrinsic Value of Stock Options
  79. 5-1: Overview of Financial Options
  80. Box: Financial Reporting for Employee Stock Options
  81. 5-2: The Single-Period Binomial Option Pricing Approach
  82. 5-3: The Single-Period Binomial Option Pricing Formula
  83. 5-4: The Multi-Period Binomial Option Pricing Model
  84. 5-5: The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model (OPM)
  85. Box: Taxes and Stock Options
  86. 5-6: The Valuation of Put Options
  87. 5-7: Applications of Option Pricing in Corporate Finance
  88. Summary
  89. Ch 6: Accounting for Financial Management
  90. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  91. Box: Intrinsic Value, Free Cash Flow, and Financial Statements
  92. 6-1: Financial Statements and Reports
  93. 6-2: The Balance Sheet
  94. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Let’s Play Hide-and-Seek!
  95. 6-3: The Income Statement
  96. 6-4: Statement of Stockholders’ Equity
  97. Box: Financial Analysis on the Web
  98. 6-5: Statement of Cash Flows
  99. Box: Filling in the GAAP
  100. 6-6: Net Cash Flow
  101. 6-7: Free Cash Flow: The Cash Flow Available for Distribution to Investors
  102. Box: Sarbanes-Oxley and Financial Fraud
  103. 6-8: Performance Evaluation
  104. 6-9: The Federal Income Tax System
  105. Box: When It Comes to Taxes, History Repeats and Repeals Itself!
  106. Summary
  107. Ch 7: Analysis of Financial Statements
  108. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  109. Box: Intrinsic Value and Analysis of Financial Statements
  110. 7-1: Financial Analysis
  111. 7-2: Liquidity Ratios
  112. 7-3: Asset Management Ratios
  113. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- The Price is Right! (Or Wrong!)
  114. 7-4: Debt Management Ratios
  115. 7-5: Profitability Ratios
  116. Box: The World Might Be Flat, But Global Accounting Is Bumpy! The Case of IFRS versus FASB
  117. 7-6: Market Value Ratios
  118. 7-7: Trend Analysis, Common Size Analysis, and Percentage Change Analysis
  119. 7-8: Tying the Ratios Together: The DuPont Equation
  120. 7-9: Comparative Ratios and Benchmarking
  121. 7-10: Uses and Limitations of Ratio Analysis
  122. Box: Ratio Analysis on the Web
  123. 7-11: Looking Beyond the Numbers
  124. Summary
  125. Part II: Corporate Valuation
  126. Ch 8: Basic Stock Valuation
  127. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  128. Box: Corporate Valuation and Stock Prices
  129. 8-1: Legal Rights and Privileges of Common Stockholders
  130. 8-2: Types of Common Stock
  131. 8-3: Stock Market Reporting
  132. 8-4: Valuing Common Stocks—Introducing the Free Cash Flow (FCF) Valuation Model
  133. 8-5: The Constant Growth Model: Valuation When Expected Free Cash Flow Grows at a Constant Rate
  134. 8-6: The Multi-Stage Model: Valuation When Expected Short-Term Free Cash Flow Grows at a Nonconstant
  135. 8-7: Application of the FCF Valuation Model to MicroDrive
  136. 8-8: Do Stock Values Reflect Long-Term or Short-Term Cash Flows?
  137. 8-9: Using the Free Cash Flow Valuation Model to Identify Value Drivers
  138. 8-10: Why Are Stock Prices so Volatile?
  139. 8-11: Valuing Common Stocks with the Dividend Growth Model
  140. 8-12: Market Multiple Analysis
  141. 8-13: Preferred Stock
  142. Summary
  143. Ch 9: Corporate Valuation and Financial Planning
  144. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  145. Box: Corporate Valuation and Financial Planning
  146. 9-1: Overview of Financial Planning
  147. 9-2: Financial Planning at MicroDrive Inc.
  148. 9-3: Forecasting Operations
  149. 9-4: Projecting MicroDrive’s Financial Statements
  150. 9-5: Analysis and Revision of the Preliminary Plan
  151. 9-6: Additional Funds Needed (AFN) Equation Method
  152. 9-7: Forecasting When the Ratios Change
  153. Summary
  154. Ch 10: Corporate Governance
  155. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  156. Box: Corporate Governance and Corporate Valuation
  157. 10-1: Agency Conflicts
  158. 10-2: Corporate Governance
  159. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Would the U.S. Government Be an Effective Board Director?
  160. Box: The Dodd-Frank Act and “Say on Pay”
  161. Box: The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and Corporate Governance
  162. Box: International Corporate Governance
  163. 10-3: Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
  164. Summary
  165. Ch 11: Determining the Cost of Capital
  166. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  167. Box: Corporate Valuation and the Cost of Capital
  168. 11-1: The Weighted Average Cost of Capital
  169. 11-2: Choosing Weights for the Weighted Average Cost of Capital
  170. 11-3: After-Tax Cost of Debt: rd(1 – T) and rstd(1 – T)
  171. Box: How Effective is the Effective Corporate Tax Rate?
  172. 11-4: Cost of Preferred Stock, rps
  173. 11-5: Cost of Common Stock: The Market Risk Premium, RPM
  174. 11-6: Using the CAPM to Estimate the Cost of Common Stock, rs
  175. 11-7: Dividend-Yield-Plus-Growth-Rate, or Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), Approach
  176. 11-8: The Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)
  177. Box: Global Variations in the Cost of Capital
  178. 11-9: Adjusting the Cost of Equity for Flotation Costs
  179. 11-10: Privately Owned Firms and Small Businesses
  180. 11-11: Managerial Issues and the Cost of Capital
  181. Summary
  182. Part III: Project Valuation
  183. Ch 12: Capital Budgeting: Decision Criteria
  184. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  185. Box: Corporate Valuation and Capital Budgeting
  186. 12-1: An Overview of Capital Budgeting
  187. 12-2: The First Step in Project Analysis
  188. 12-3: Net Present Value (NPV)
  189. 12-4: Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
  190. 12-5: Modified Internal Rate of Return (MIRR)
  191. 12-6: Profitability Index (PI)
  192. 12-7: Payback Period
  193. 12-8: How to Use the Different Capital Budgeting Methods
  194. 12-9: Other Issues in Capital Budgeting
  195. Summary
  196. Ch 13: Capital Budgeting: Estimating Cash Flows and Analyzing Risk
  197. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  198. Box: Project Valuation, Cash Flows, and Risk Analysis
  199. 13-1: Identifying Relevant Cash Flows
  200. 13-2: Analysis of an Expansion Project
  201. Box: Mistakes in Cash Flow Estimation Can Kill Innovation
  202. 13-3: Risk Analysis in Capital Budgeting7
  203. 13-4: Measuring Stand-Alone Risk
  204. 13-5: Sensitivity Analysis
  205. 13-6: Scenario Analysis
  206. 13-7: Monte Carlo Simulation
  207. 13-8: Project Risk Conclusions
  208. 13-9: Replacement Analysis
  209. 13-10: Real Options
  210. 13-11: Phased Decisions and Decision Trees
  211. Summary
  212. Appendix 13A: Tax Depreciation
  213. Ch 14: Real Options
  214. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  215. 14-1: Valuing Real Options
  216. 14-2: The Investment Timing Option: An Illustration
  217. 14-3: The Growth Option: An Illustration
  218. 14-4: Concluding Thoughts on Real Options
  219. Summary
  220. Part IV: Strategic Financing Decisions
  221. Ch 15: Distributions to Shareholders: Dividends and Repurchases
  222. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  223. Box: Uses of Free Cash Flow: Distributions to Shareholders
  224. 15-1: An Overview of Cash Distributions
  225. 15-2: Procedures for Cash Distributions
  226. 15-3: Cash Distributions and Firm Value
  227. 15-4: Clientele Effect
  228. 15-5: Information Content, or Signaling, Hypothesis
  229. 15-6: Implications for Dividend Stability
  230. Box: Will Dividends Ever Be the Same?
  231. 15-7: Setting the Target Distribution Level: The Residual Distribution Model
  232. 15-8: The Residual Distribution Model in Practice
  233. 15-9: A Tale of Two Cash Distributions: Dividends versus Stock Repurchases
  234. 15-10: The Pros and Cons of Dividends and Repurchases
  235. Box: Dividend Yields Around the World
  236. 15-11: Other Factors Influencing Distributions
  237. 15-12: Summarizing the Distribution Policy Decision
  238. 15-13: Stock Splits and Stock Dividends
  239. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Talk about a Split Personality!
  240. 15-14: Dividend Reinvestment Plans
  241. Summary
  242. Ch 16: Capital Structure Decisions
  243. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  244. Box: Corporate Valuation and Capital Structure
  245. 16-1: An Overview of Capital Structure
  246. 16-2: Business Risk and Financial Risk
  247. 16-3: Capital Structure Theory
  248. Box: Yogi Berra on the MM Proposition
  249. 16-4: Capital Structure Evidence and Implications
  250. 16-5: Estimating the Optimal Capital Structure
  251. 16-6: Anatomy of a Recapitalization
  252. Box: The Global Economic Crisis- Deleveraging
  253. Summary
  254. Ch 17: Dynamic Capital Structures and Corporate Valuation
  255. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  256. Box: Corporate Valuation and Capital Structure Decisions
  257. 17-1: The Impact of Growth and Tax Shields on Value
  258. 17-2: The Modigliani and Miller Models and the Compressed Adjusted Present Value (APV) Model
  259. 17-3: Dynamic Capital Structures and the Adjusted Present Value (APV) Model
  260. 17-4: Risky Debt and Equity as an Option
  261. 17-5: Introducing Personal Taxes: The Miller Model
  262. 17-6: Capital Structure Theory: Arbitrage Proofs of the Modigliani-Miller Theorems
  263. Summary
  264. Part V: Tactical Financing Decisions
  265. Ch 18: Initial Public Offerings, Investment Banking, and Financial Restructuring
  266. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  267. 18-1: The Financial Life Cycle of a Start-up Company
  268. 18-2: The Decision to Go Public
  269. 18-3: The Process of Going Public: An Initial Public Offering
  270. 18-4: Equity Carve-Outs: A Special Type of IPO
  271. 18-5: Other Ways to Raise Funds in the Capital Markets
  272. Box: Where There’s Smoke There’s Fire
  273. 18-6: Investment Banking Activities and Their Role in the Global Economic Crisis
  274. Box: What was the Role of Investment Banks?
  275. 18-7: The Decision to Go Private
  276. 18-8: Managing the Maturity Structure of Debt
  277. 18-9: Refunding Operations
  278. Box; TVA Ratchets Down Its Interest Expenses
  279. 18-10: Managing the Risk Structure of Debt with Project Financing
  280. Summary
  281. Ch 19: Lease Financing
  282. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  283. 19-1: Types of Leases
  284. 19-2: Tax Effects
  285. 19-3: Financial Statement Effects
  286. Off-Balance Sheet Financing: Is It Going to Disappear?
  287. 19-4: Evaluation by the Lessee
  288. 19-5: Evaluation by the Lessor
  289. 19-6: Other Issues in Lease Analysis
  290. Box: What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You!
  291. Box: Lease Securitization
  292. 19-7: Other Reasons for Leasing
  293. Summary
  294. Ch 20: Hybrid Financing: Preferred Stock, Warrants, and Convertibles
  295. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  296. 20-1: Preferred Stock
  297. Box: The Romance Had No Chemistry, but It Had a Lot of Preferred Stock!
  298. Box: Hybrids Aren’t Only for Corporations
  299. 20-2: Warrants
  300. 20-3: Convertible Securities
  301. 20-4: A Final Comparison of Warrants and Convertibles
  302. 20-5: Reporting Earnings When Warrants or Convertibles Are Outstanding
  303. Summary
  304. Part VI: Working Capital Management
  305. Ch 21: Supply Chains and Working Capital Management
  306. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  307. Box: Corporate Valuation and Working Capital Management
  308. 21-1: Overview of Working Capital Management
  309. 21-2: Using and Financing Operating Current Assets
  310. 21-3: The Cash Conversion Cycle
  311. Box: Some Firms Operate with Negative Working Capital!
  312. 21-4: The Cash Budget
  313. 21-5: Cash Management and the Target Cash Balance
  314. 21-6: Cash Management Techniques
  315. Box: Your Check Isn’t in the Mail
  316. 21-7: Inventory Management
  317. Box: Supply Chain Management
  318. 21-8: Receivables Management
  319. Box: Supply Chain Finance
  320. 21-9: Accruals and Accounts Payable (Trade Credit)
  321. Box: A Wag of the Finger or Tip of the Hat? The Colbert Report and Small Business Payment Terms
  322. 21-10: Managing Short-Term Investments
  323. 21-11: Short-Term Financing
  324. 21-12: Short-Term Bank Loans
  325. 21-13: Commercial Paper
  326. 21-14: Use of Security in Short-Term Financing
  327. Summary
  328. Ch 22: Providing and Obtaining Credit
  329. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  330. 22-1: Credit Policy
  331. 22-2: Setting the Credit Period and Standards
  332. 22-3: Setting the Collection Policy
  333. 22-4: Cash Discounts
  334. 22-5: Other Factors Influencing Credit Policy
  335. 22-6: The Payments Pattern Approach to Monitoring Receivables
  336. 22-7: Analyzing Proposed Changes in Credit Policy
  337. 22-8: Analyzing Proposed Changes in Credit Policy: Incremental Analysis
  338. 22-9: The Cost of Bank Loans
  339. 22-10: Choosing a Bank
  340. Summary
  341. Ch 23: Other Topics in Working Capital Management
  342. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  343. 23-1: The Concept of Zero Working Capital
  344. 23-2: Setting the Target Cash Balance
  345. 23-3: Inventory Control Systems
  346. 23-4: Accounting for Inventory
  347. 23-5: The Economic Ordering Quantity (EOQ) Model
  348. 23-6: EOQ Model Extensions
  349. Summary
  350. Part VII: Special Topics
  351. Ch 24: Enterprise Risk Management
  352. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  353. Box: Corporate Valuation and Risk Management
  354. 24-1: Reasons to Manage Risk
  355. 24-2: An Overview of Enterprise Risk Management
  356. 24-3: A Framework for Enterprise Risk Management
  357. 24-4: Categories of Risk Events
  358. 24-5: Foreign Exchange (FX) Risk
  359. 24-6: Commodity Price Risk
  360. 24-7: Interest Rate Risk
  361. Box: The Game of Truth or LIBOR
  362. 24-8: Project Selection Risks
  363. 24-9: Managing Credit Risks
  364. 24-10: Risk and Human Safety
  365. Summary
  366. Ch 25: Bankruptcy, Reorganization, and Liquidation
  367. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  368. 25-1: Financial Distress and Its Consequences
  369. 25-2: Issues Facing a Firm in Financial Distress
  370. 25-3: Settlements without Going through Formal Bankruptcy
  371. 25-4: Federal Bankruptcy Law
  372. 25-5: Reorganization in Bankruptcy
  373. 25-6: Liquidation in Bankruptcy
  374. Box: A Nation of Defaulters?
  375. 25-7: Anatomy of a Bankruptcy: Transforming the GM Corporation into the GM Company
  376. 25-8: Other Motivations for Bankruptcy
  377. 25-9: Some Criticisms of Bankruptcy Laws
  378. Summary
  379. Ch 26: Mergers and Corporate Control
  380. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  381. 26-1: Rationale for Mergers
  382. 26-2: Types of Mergers
  383. 26-3: Level of Merger Activity
  384. 26-4: Hostile versus Friendly Takeovers
  385. 26-5: Merger Regulation
  386. 26-6: Overview of Merger Analysis
  387. 26-7: The Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE) Approach
  388. 26-8: Illustration of the Three Valuation Approaches for a Constant Capital Structure
  389. 26-9: Setting the Bid Price
  390. 26-10: Analysis When There Is a Permanent Change in Capital Structure
  391. 26-11: Taxes and the Structure of the Takeover Bid
  392. Box: Tempest in a Teapot?
  393. 26-12: Financial Reporting for Mergers
  394. 26-13: Analysis for a “True Consolidation”
  395. 26-14: The Role of Investment Bankers
  396. 26-15: Who Wins: The Empirical Evidence
  397. Box: Merger Mistakes
  398. 26-16: Corporate Alliances
  399. 26-17: Divestitures
  400. 26-18: Holding Companies
  401. Summary
  402. Ch 27: Multinational Financial Management
  403. Beginning-of-Chapter Questions
  404. Box: Corporate Valuation in a Global Context
  405. 27-1: Multinational, or Global, Corporations
  406. 27-2: Multinational versus Domestic Financial Management
  407. 27-3: Exchange Rates
  408. 27-4: Exchange Rates and International Trade
  409. 27-5: The International Monetary System and Exchange Rate Policies
  410. 27-6: Trading in Foreign Exchange
  411. 27-7: Interest Rate Parity
  412. 27-8: Purchasing Power Parity
  413. Box: Hungry for a Big Mac? Go To Ukraine!
  414. 27-9: Inflation, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
  415. 27-10: International Money and Capital Markets
  416. Box: Greasing the Wheels of International Business
  417. Box: Stock Market Indices Around the World
  418. 27-11: Multinational Capital Budgeting
  419. Box: Consumer Finance in China
  420. Box: Double Irish with a Dutch Twist
  421. 27-12: International Capital Structures
  422. 27-13: Multinational Working Capital Management
  423. Summary
  424. Appendixes
  425. Appendix A: Values of the Areas under the Standard Normal Distribution Function
  426. Appendix B: Answers to End-of-Chapter Problems
  427. Appendix C: Selected Equations
  428. Glossary
  429. Name Index
  430. Subject Index

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