Crowdfunding – An Innovative Corporate Finance Method and Its Decision-Making Steps

Author(s):  
Valerie Busse ◽  
Michal Gregus
Author(s):  
Brenda Hannigan

Company Law brings clarity and analysis to the ever-changing landscape of this field. The text aims to capture the dynamism of the subject, places the material in context, highlights its relevance and topicality, and guides readers through all the major issues. From incorporation through to liquidation and dissolution, the work explores the workings of the corporate entity. The book is divided into five distinct sections covering corporate structure (including legal personality and constitutional issues), corporate governance (including directors’ duties and liabilities), shareholders’ rights and remedies (including powers of decision-making and shareholder petitions), corporate finance (including share and loan capital), and corporate insolvency.


Author(s):  
Brenda Hannigan

Company Law brings clarity and analysis to the ever-changing landscape of this field. The text aims to capture the dynamism of the subject, places the material in context, highlights its relevance and topicality, and guides readers through all the major areas. The book is divided into five distinct sections covering corporate structure (including legal personality and constitutional issues), corporate governance (including directors' duties and liabilities), shareholders' rights and remedies (including powers of decision-making and shareholder engagement), corporate finance (including share and loan capital), and corporate insolvency (including insolvencies arising).


Author(s):  
Marius Guenzel ◽  
Ulrike Malmendier

One of the fastest-growing areas of finance research is the study of managerial biases and their implications for firm outcomes. Since the mid-2000s, this strand of behavioral corporate finance has provided theoretical and empirical evidence on the influence of biases in the corporate realm, such as overconfidence, experience effects, and the sunk-cost fallacy. The field has been a leading force in dismantling the argument that traditional economic mechanisms—selection, learning, and market discipline—would suffice to uphold the rational-manager paradigm. Instead, the evidence reveals that behavioral forces exert a significant influence at every stage of a chief executive officer’s (CEO’s) career. First, at the appointment stage, selection does not impede the promotion of behavioral managers. Instead, competitive environments oftentimes promote their advancement, even under value-maximizing selection mechanisms. Second, while at the helm of the company, learning opportunities are limited, since many managerial decisions occur at low frequency, and their causal effects are clouded by self-attribution bias and difficult to disentangle from those of concurrent events. Third, at the dismissal stage, market discipline does not ensure the firing of biased decision-makers as board members themselves are subject to biases in their evaluation of CEOs. By documenting how biases affect even the most educated and influential decision-makers, such as CEOs, the field has generated important insights into the hard-wiring of biases. Biases do not simply stem from a lack of education, nor are they restricted to low-ability agents. Instead, biases are significant elements of human decision-making at the highest levels of organizations. An important question for future research is how to limit, in each CEO career phase, the adverse effects of managerial biases. Potential approaches include refining selection mechanisms, designing and implementing corporate repairs, and reshaping corporate governance to account not only for incentive misalignments, but also for biased decision-making.


Author(s):  
Henrik Cronqvist ◽  
Désirée-Jessica Pély

Corporate finance is about understanding the determinants and consequences of the investment and financing policies of corporations. In a standard neoclassical profit maximization framework, rational agents, that is, managers, make corporate finance decisions on behalf of rational principals, that is, shareholders. Over the past two decades, there has been a rapidly growing interest in augmenting standard finance frameworks with novel insights from cognitive psychology, and more recently, social psychology and sociology. This emerging subfield in finance research has been dubbed behavioral corporate finance, which differentiates between rational and behavioral agents and principals. The presence of behavioral shareholders, that is, principals, may lead to market timing and catering behavior by rational managers. Such managers will opportunistically time the market and exploit mispricing by investing capital, issuing securities, or borrowing debt when costs of capital are low and shunning equity, divesting assets, repurchasing securities, and paying back debt when costs of capital are high. Rational managers will also incite mispricing, for example, cater to non-standard preferences of shareholders through earnings management or by transitioning their firms into an in-fashion category to boost the stock’s price. The interaction of behavioral managers, that is, agents, with rational shareholders can also lead to distortions in corporate decision making. For example, managers may perceive fundamental values differently and systematically diverge from optimal decisions. Several personal traits, for example, overconfidence or narcissism, and environmental factors, for example, fatal natural disasters, shape behavioral managers’ preferences and beliefs, short or long term. These factors may bias the value perception by managers and thus lead to inferior decision making. An extension of behavioral corporate finance is social corporate finance, where agents and principals do not make decisions in a vacuum but rather are embedded in a dynamic social environment. Since managers and shareholders take a social position within and across markets, social psychology and sociology can be useful to understand how social traits, states, and activities shape corporate decision making if an individual’s psychology is not directly observable.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 706-714
Author(s):  
Maryna Brychko

This paper makes two related contributions to corporate finance theory and stakeholder theory. First, the author intend to examine relationship between sustainability of stakeholders’ financial relations and efficiency of corporate governance, taking into account lagging of decision-making corporate governance in banks to it financial performance. Second, the author seeks to prioritize stakeholders’ financial relations of the emerging stakeholder model of corporate governance at banks by analyzing two relevant dimensions of this model: contribution valued resources to the bank and power that the stakeholders have within the bank. The findings confirm that efficiency of bank management in the system of stakeholder’s financial relationships in absolute efficiency of corporate governance achieved solely through sustainable financial relations of “principal-agent” (where principals are individuals and agent is apparatus of corporate governance). The results show that the role of individuals as sub-agents, enterprises as principals and sub-agents, shareholders as principals formed negative effect.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 894
Author(s):  
Monika Wieczorek-Kosmala

The prime purpose of this paper is to explain the concept of risk capital and advocate for its implementation in the management of non-financial companies. The paper is kept in the discursive tone, as the problem is new, and it first requires to establish the conceptual framework for further empirical considerations. With reference to the origins of the concept of risk capital (related to its understanding in financial institutions), the paper discusses the utility of risk capital for the management of risk in non-financial companies, with the recognition of the sustainable dimension of risk capital. The discussion is framed within the corporate finance approach. In the applicative dimension, the paper identifies the universe of the sources of risk capital and proposes a taxonomy of these sources. It considers both the well-established traditional sources, as well as the state-of-the-art solutions that are in the early stages of their adoption for the needs of corporate end-users. The conclusions address the possible areas of tensions and of the inclusion of risk capital in the decision-making process, as well as the areas of further empirical research within.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 11-29
Author(s):  
Gina Paola Fonseca Cifuentes ◽  
Lady Johanna Castaño Buitrago

El presente estudio es abordado desde la perspectiva analítica y estratégica en el área de las finanzas empresariales, buscando determinar el nivel de información acerca del mercado de valores con el que cuentan los directivos de las medianas y grandes empresas del departamento de Boyacá, debido al evidenciado rezago en lo que respecta a la apropiación por parte del empresariado Boyacense de los temasde toma de decisiones financieras, y en consecuencia en lo concerniente al sistema financiero específicamente el mercado de valores, con base en esto se pretende establecer panoramas que brinden herramientas de diagnóstico para la formulación de planes estratégicos tendientes al aprovechamiento de las oportunidades y ventajas que en términos financieros les brinda el mercado de valores a las diferentesorganizaciones.  ABSTRACTThe present study is approached from the analytical and strategic perspective in the area of corporate finance, seeking to determine the level of information about the market in that count managers of medium and large enterprises in Boyacá department due to evident lag with regard to the appropriation by the Boyacense entrepreneurship issues of financial decision making, and therefore specifically withregard to the stock market financial system, based on this set panoramas basis to provide diagnostic tools for formulation aimed at exploiting the opportunities and benefits financially gives the stock market to different organizations strategic plans.KEYWORDSStock market, investment, financing, information, strategy, medium and large companies


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 51-56
Author(s):  
Marcin Banaszek

Purpose of the study: The subject of consideration is the behavioral aspects of corporate finance. The consideration is devoted to the basic inclinations of psychological nature characteristic of managers. The main purpose of the article is to characterize the irrational behavior of managers in the process of financial decision-making in the enterprise. Methodology: The paper was prepared with the use the critical literature review method mainly in the field of behavioral corporate finance. Main findings: The discussion shows that behavioral corporate finance focuses mainly on cognitive and motivational-emotional processes in managers, which may occur in various decision areas within which managers make choices. There are three groups of psychological phenomena and inclinations that are characteristic of managers who manage business entities, namely predispositions to systematic inference errors, heuristics, and the presentation effect. Application of the study: The presented article refers to the irrational behavior of managers in the process of making financial decisions in the company. It implies reflections in such scientific fields as, among others, economics and finance, management and psychology. The use of the tools of psychology allows analyzing the problems of financial decision-making of managers in the enterprise, noticing in them some deviations from rationality that can affect the efficiency of the enterprise. The content of the article can be useful for managers making financial decisions in an enterprise. Originality/Novelty of the study: Behavioral finance is a young discipline of finance, the scientific output of which in Poland is still small. Behavioral aspects are just beginning to gain importance in the decision-making process, especially the financial one. The tendencies of managers to irrationality in the decision-making process presented in this article allow us to better understand the errors, psychological factors that may cause wrong decisions, which in turn may translate into poorer financial condition of the whole enterprise. The article can inspire further research and inquiry in the field of behavioral finance and contribute to other interesting scientific studies.


2010 ◽  
Vol 34-35 ◽  
pp. 1185-1189
Author(s):  
Ting Zeng

Corporate Finance is a business process the company forecast capital movement, organization, coordination, analysis and control of a decision-making and management activities. If the long-term store the excess corporate cash, will result in capital investment flow can not, can not be profitable. At the same time, enterprises need to expand production but difficult to raise funds. Therefore, SME Banking, the key is enterprise fund safety, liquidity and profitability of organic combination.


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