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by: Mark Grinblatt, Sheridan Titman
Amazon.com's Price: $131.00 Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.15
EAN: 9780072294330
ISBN: 0072294337
Label: McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 912
Publication Date: October 16, 2001
Publisher: McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Sales Rank: 82492
Studio: McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: 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.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Good for shelf reference, bad for class
I bought this for a corporate financial policy at the Ross School of Business (Michigan). I read through the assigned chapters during the first couple of classes, but a lot of it was directly overlapping what we talked about in class. It is a good book with easy to understand explanations. If the choice was to use it as a shelf reference it is definitely a buy. I know I will use it after I graduate at my next job. However, if the purpose is just to read it for class and you have a good professor ... Read More
Rating: - Complete Waste of Time
I rarely write reviews, but feel compelled to do so with this book so that I might prevent other people from wasting their time as I have. A lot of people have criticised this book for its lack of more sophisticated material. Putting that aside, the book is very poor on the things it does cover.
This book is written in a very confusing style. There is no didactic elegance and it is hard to acquire a clear understanding of the subject matter. The writers seem to assume that their readers ... Read More
Rating: - Unnecessarily Complex
Author devotes 2 pages to mathematically prove & philosophically justify that a manager should chose the highest NPV project before chosing the next highest NPV project. Such logic continues ad infinitum throughout the 800+ page text. Time for 3rd Ed.
Rating: - A finance textbook full of errors and holes
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 ... Read More
Rating: - A Wonderful Approach to Corporate Finance
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 ... Read More
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