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How does the capital market affect corporate governance?
C. P. Mayer has written: 'Corporation tax, finance and the cost of capital' 'Stock markets and corporate performance' -- subject(s): Corporations, Stock-exchange, Finance 'Corporate governance, competition, and performance' -- subject(s): Performance, Competition, Corporate governance
Corporate governance is most often viewed as both the structure and the relationships which determine corporate direction and performance. The board of directors is typically central to corporate governance. Its relationship to the other primary participants, typically shareholders and management, is critical. Additional participants include employees, customers, suppliers, and creditors. The corporate governance framework also depends on the legal, regulatory, institutional and ethical environment of the community. Whereas the 20th century might be viewed as the age of management, the early 21st century is predicted to be more focused on governance. Both terms address control of corporations but governance has always required an examination of underlying purpose and legitimacy. - - James McRitchie, 8/1999 http://corpgov.net/library/definitions.html
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short notes on : 1. cost of capital of a bond. 2. cost of capital of an equity share. 3. discounted pay backperiod. 4. modified internal rate of return. 5. mutual funds in india.
cost of capital
what is capital cost
The marginal cost of capital (MCC) is the cost of the last dollar of capital raised, essentially the cost of another unit of capital raised. As more capital is raised, the marginal cost of capital rises.
capital is a fixed cost
concepts of cost of capital
imoportant of capital cost to a hotel imoportant of capital cost to a hotel
Weighted Average Cost Of Capital - WACC A calculation of a firm's cost of capital in which each category of capital is proportionately weighted. All capital sources - common stock, preferred stock, bonds and any other long-term debt - are included in a WACC calculation. WACC is calculated by multiplying the cost of each capital component by its proportional weight and then summing: Where Re = cost of equity Rd = cost of debt E = market value of the firm's equity D = market value of the firm's debt V = E + D E/V = percentage of financing that is equity D/V = percentage of financing that is debt Tc = corporate tax rate Weighted Average Cost Of Capital - WACC A calculation of a firm's cost of capital in which each category of capital is proportionately weighted. All capital sources - common stock, preferred stock, bonds and any other long-term debt - are included in a WACC calculation. WACC is calculated by multiplying the cost of each capital component by its proportional weight and then summing: WACC= E/V * Re + D/V* Rd*(1-Tc) Where: Re = cost of equity Rd = cost of debt E = market value of the firm's equity D = market value of the firm's debt V = E + D E/V = percentage of financing that is equity D/V = percentage of financing that is debt Tc = corporate tax rate