For courses in Capital Budgeting.
Capital Budgeting and Investment Analysis marries theory with practice by
providing numerous illustrations of real-world applications. It includes a discussion of
capital budgeting's link to the corporation's strategy for creating value as well as
addressing the international aspects of capital budgeting.
Features
- Unique chapter on corporate strategy.
- Helps students understand the origins and characteristics of positive net present value
projects.
CONTENTS
1. Introduction to Capital Budgeting.
2. Capital-Budgeting Principles and Techniques.
3. Estimating Project Cash Flows.
4. Real Options and Project Analysis.
5. Risk in Capital Budgeting.
6. Estimating the Project Cost of Capital.
7. Corporate Strategy and the Capital Budgeting Decision.
Paperback, 264 pages
Alan C. Shapiro is the Ivadelle and Theodore Johnson Professor
of Banking and Finance and past chairman of the Department of Finance and Business
Economics, Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California. Prior to
joining USC in 1978, he was an Assistant Professor at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania (1971-1978). He has also been a Visiting Professor at Yale University,
UCLA, the Stockholm School of Economics, University of British Columbia, and the U.S.
Naval Academy. Professor Shapiro received a B.A. in Mathematics from Rice University
(1967) and a Ph.D. in Economics from Carnegie Mellon University (1971).
His specialties are corporate and international financial management. His best-selling
textbook Multinational Financial Management (Seventh Edition, 2003) is in use in
most of the leading MBA programs around the world. He has also written Modern Corporate
Finance (1990), cited by the Journal of Finance as potentially the
"standard reference volume in corporate finance," Foundations of
Multinational Financial Management (Fifth Edition, 2004), International Corporate
Finance (1989), and, with Sheldon Balbirer, Modern Corporate Finance: An
Interdisciplinary Approach to Value Creation (Prentice Hall, 2000).
Dr. Shapiro is currently researching the links between corporate finance and corporate
strategy. One outcome of this research is the article "Corporate Stakeholders and
Corporate Finance," for which he and co-author Brad Cornell received the 1987
Distinguished Applied Research Award from the Financial Management Association and which
is the most frequently cited article published in Financial Management since 1985.
Dr. Shapiro has consulted with the FBI, the Federal Home Loan Bank, RTC, the American
Law Institute, the Department of Justice, SEC, the Department of Energy, the Internal
Revenue Service, FDIC, and numerous firms and banks, including Dow Chemical, Abbott
Laboratories, Aetna, Anheuser-Busch, IBM, Caltex, Texas Instruments, Arco Chemical, NCR,
GTE, SBC Communications, Scott Paper, Time Warner, Pacific Enterprises, Northrop Grumman,
OKC, Computer Sciences Corporation, General Foods, Vulcan Materials, Flying Tiger Line,
Wells Fargo, Pepsico, North Broken Hill, BankAmerica, and Citicorp. He frequently serves
as an expert witness in cases involving valuation, economic damages, S&Ls,
international finance, takeovers, and transfer pricing. In addition, he is a director of
Remington Oil and Gas Corp., a government-appointed director of Lincoln S&L, and a
past director of OKC Corp.
He has won several teaching awards and has taught in numerous executive education
programs, including programs sponsored by Yale University, the Wharton School of Business,
University of Southern California, UCLA, UC Berkeley, Columbia University, University of
Hawaii, University of Washington, University of Melbourne, Stockholm School of Economics,
and the American Management Association. Dr. Shapiro also conducts numerous in-house
training and executive programs for banks, corporations, government agencies, consulting
firms, and law firms in the areas of corporate finance and international finance and
economics. He has lectured on problems of international finance and economics in Munich,
Tokyo, Frankfurt, Seoul, Hong Kong, Singapore, Guangzhou, Shanghai, London, Oxford,
Sydney, Melbourne, Mexico City, Monterey, Santiago, Rome, Budapest, Vienna, Buenos Aires,
and Paris. In October 1993, Business Week recognized him as one of the ten most
in-demand business school professors in the United States for teaching in in-house
corporate executive education programs.
Dr. Shapiro has published more than 50 articles in such leading academic and
professional journals as the Journal of Finance, Harvard Business Review, Columbia
Journal of World Business, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Review of
Financial Studies, Journal of Business, Journal of International Money and Finance,
Financial Management, Management Science, and Journal of Applied Corporate Finance.
In 1988, he was cited as one of the "100 Most Prolific Authors in Finance."
Another study published in 1991 ranked him as one of the most prolific contributors to
international business literature. He has also published two monographs, International
Corporate Finance: Survey and Synthesis and Foreign Exchange Risk Management.