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Finance book summary

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Full finance book summary of the chapters needed for the first year bachelor in International Business

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  • No
  • 1-7, 9-12, 20
  • October 17, 2021
  • 11
  • 2020/2021
  • Summary
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Chapter 1: The Corporation and Financial Markets
o Sole Proprietorship: owned and run by 1 person (most common type of business)
 Straightforward to set up
 Principal limitation: no separation between firm and its owner
 Owner has unlimited personal liability for any of the firm’s debt
 Life of firm = life of owner, difficult to transfer ownership
o Partnership: same as sole proprietorship but with more than one owner
 All partners are liable for the firm’s debt
 Can end with death or withdrawal of any single partner, this is avoidable if the
partnership agreement provides alternatives (e.g. buyout of a deceased partner)
 Limited partnership: 2 types of owners: general partners (same rights &
privileges as partnership) and limited partners (have limited liability and no
management authority)
o Limited Liability Company (LLC): limited partnership without a general partner
 All owners have limited liability but can also run the business
 Relatively new business form
o Corporation: a legally defined, artificial being separate from its owners
 Many legal powers that individuals have (own assets, borrow money, etc)
 Limited liability of the owners = shareholders
 Control: Board of Directors
Double taxation: #1 on corporate profits (corporate income tax) and #2 as shareholders
(personal dividend tax)
S corporations: corporations exempt from paying corporate taxes on their profits
Corporate Management Team: (ownership and direct control separated)
Board of Directors: controlling organ, elected by shareholders, have ultimate authority
Chief Executive Officer (CEO): runs corporation by instituting rules and policies set by the
board of directors (day to day decisions)
Chief Financial Officer (CFO): reports directly to CEO (investing, financing, etc)
 Picking right investment projects (positive Net Present Value)
 Determine the optimal mix of financing instruments (equity vs. debt)
 Cash management: safeguarding balance between cash inflows and outflows
Firm objectives (goals): Maximize shareholder value (can cause negative externalities) so
also care about other objectives: environment, social, governance
Agency Problems: managers act in their own interest instead of the shareholder interest
Hostile takeover: Low stock prices may entice a Corporate Raider to buy enough stock so
they have enough control to replace current management. The stock price will rise after the
new management team “fixes” the company
Bankruptcy: transfer of ownership and control from shareholders to creditors (bondholders/
banks), arises when corporate cash flows constantly fall below required interest payments

, Private company: limited set of shareholders, stock may be traded privately
Public company: stock is traded by the public on a stock exchange
Primary markets: When a corporation itself issues new shares of stock and sells them to
investors, they do so on the primary market
Secondary markets: After the initial transaction in the primary market, the shares continue
to trade in a secondary market between investors
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE): market makers/specialists, each stock has only one
market maker
NASDAQ: doesn’t meet in a physical location, may have many market makers for a stock
Bid-ask Spread: the amount by which the ask price exceeds the bid price for an asset in the
market, it is a transaction cost
Limit order: an order to buy or sell a set amount at a fixed price
Limit order book: the collection of all limit orders
Market orders: orders that trade immediately at the best outstanding limit order
High Frequency Traders (HFTs): A class of traders who, with the aid of computers,
execute trades many times per second in response to new information
Dark pools: do not make their limit order books visible, instead, they offer investors the
ability to trade at a better price with the trade-off being that their order might not be filled if
an excess of either buy or sell orders is received
Fintech: relation between financial innovation and technical innovation
Blockchain: A technology that allows a transaction to be recorded in a publicly verifiable
way without the need for a trusted third party to certify the authenticity of the transaction
Cryptocurrency: A currency whose creation and ownership is determined via a public
blockchain
Robo-advisors: Computer programs that are intended to replace the work of financial
advisors by providing detailed and customized investment recommendations
Machine learning (ML): the study of computer algorithms that improve automatically when
fed with new data. It is seen as a subset of artificial intelligence

Chapter 2: Introduction to Financial Statement Analysis
Disclosure requirements for listed companies: send periodic financial information to stock
exchange (SEC, Euronext) + Annual report to shareholders
Balance sheet / statement of financial position:
 Snapshot in time of the firm’s financial position
 Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity
 Distinguish short and long term assets/liabilities

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