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corporate finance |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Acronyms, Wikipedia | 0.06 sec. |
corporate financeAcquisition and allocation of a corporation's funds or resources, with the goal of maximizing shareholder wealth (i.e., stock value). Funds are acquired from both internal and external sources at the lowest possible cost and may be obtained through equity (e.g., sale of stock) or debt (e.g., bonds, bank loans). Resource allocation is the investment of funds; these investments fall into the categories of current assets (such as cash and inventory) and fixed assets (such as real estate and machinery). Corporate finance must balance the needs of employees, customers, and suppliers against the interests of the shareholders. See also business finance. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Houlihan Lokey), an international investment bank, and the assets and operations of the Corporate Finance Group of ORIX's wholly-owned subsidiary ORIX USA Corporation. Latin America is starting to become a place where we have opportunities and chances to work again in corporate finance because we have started to have a more positive environment in many economies in the region," says Guillermo Tagle, director of Santander Investments in Chile. If John Weisenseel gets his way, FEI's Committee on Corporate Finance (CCF) will--within the two years of his chairmanship--become an exceptionally active committee of about 35-40 members who work primarily in the treasury area. |
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