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Corporate Finance Fundamentals Paperback – 1 April 2009
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length864 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMcGraw Hill Higher Education
- Publication date1 April 2009
- Dimensions20.2 x 3.4 x 25.6 cm
- ISBN-100071281614
- ISBN-13978-0071281614
Product details
- Publisher : McGraw Hill Higher Education; 8th edition (1 April 2009)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 864 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0071281614
- ISBN-13 : 978-0071281614
- Dimensions : 20.2 x 3.4 x 25.6 cm
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Stephen Alan "Steve" Ross is the inaugural Franco Modigliani Professor of Financial Economics at the MIT Sloan School of Management. He is known for initiating several important theories and models in financial economics. He is a widely published author in finance and economics, and is coauthor of one of the best-selling Corporate Finance texts.
He received his B.S. with honors from Caltech in 1965 where he majored in physics, and his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard in 1970, and has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Yale School of Management, and MIT. At Yale he was the Sterling Professor of Economics and Finance .
Ross is best known for the development of the arbitrage pricing theory (mid-1970s) as well as for his role in developing the binomial options pricing model (1979; also known as the Cox-Ross-Rubinstein model). He was an initiator of the fundamental financial concept of risk-neutral pricing. In 1985 he contributed to the creation of the Cox-Ingersoll-Ross model for interest rate dynamics. Such theories have become an important part of the paradigm known as neoclassical finance.
Ross served as President of the American Finance Association in 1988. He was named International Association of Financial Engineers' Financial Engineer of the Year in 1996.
He gave the inaugural lecture of the Princeton Lectures in Finance, sponsored by the Bendheim Center for Finance of Princeton University, in 2001. It became a book in 2004, defending neoclassical finance, and such notions as the efficiency and rationality of markets, against critics, especially those who describe their work as behavioral finance.
Ross is a recipient of a 2006 Smith Breeden Prize, as well as a 2015 Deutsche Bank Prize for developing models used for assessing prices for options and other assets in the last 30 years.
Bio from Wikipedia the free encyclopedia.
Bradford D. (Brad) Jordan, University of Florida. Dr. Jordan previously held the duPont Endowed Chair in Banking and Financial Services at the University of Kentucky, where he was department chair for many years. He specializes in corporate finance and securities valuation. His recent research examines mutual fund manager skill, the effect of taxes on security values, the valuation of exotic options, and the pricing of IPOs. He has published numerous articles in leading finance journals, and he has received a variety of research awards, including the Fama/DFA Award in 2010.
Dr. Jordan is coauthor of Corporate Finance 12/e, Fundamentals of Corporate Finance 12/e, and Essentials of Corporate Finance 8/e, three of the most widely used business finance textbooks in the world, along with Fundamentals of Investments: Valuation and Management 9/e, a popular investments text.