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MANAGING PROJECTS

Projects represent nonroutine business activities that often have long-term strategic ramifications for a firm. In this chapter, we examined how projects differ from routine business activities and discussed the major phases of projects. We noted how environmental changes have resulted in increased attention being paid to projects and project management over the past decade. In the second half of the chapter, we introduced some basic tools that businesses can use when planning for and controlling projects. Both Gantt charts and network diagrams give managers a visual picture of how a project is going. Network diagrams have the added advantage of showing the precedence between activities, as well as the critical path(s). We wrapped up the chapter by showing how these concepts are embedded in inexpensive yet powerful software packages such as Microsoft Project. If you want to learn more about project management, we encourage you to take a look at the Web site for the Proj...

Capital Structure and Leverage

When we studied the cost of capital in Chapter 10, we took the firm’s capital structure as given and calculated the cost of capital based on that structure. Then in Chapters 11, 12, and 13, we described capital budgeting techniques, which use the cost of capital as input. Capital budgeting decisions determine the types of projects that a firm accepts, which affect the nature of the firm’s assets and its business risk. In this chapter, we reverse the process, taking the firm’s assets and business risk as given and then seeking to determine the best way to finance those assets. More specifically, in this chapter, we examined the effects of finansial leverage on earnings per share, stock prices, and the cost of capital and we discussed various capital structure theories.
The different theories lead to different conclusions about the optimal capital structure, and no one has been able to prove that one theory is better than the others. Therefore, we cannot estimate the optimal capital structure with much precision. Accordingly, financial executives generally treat the optimal capital structure as a range—for example, 40% to 50% debt—rather than as a precise point, such as 45%. The concepts discussed in this chapter are used as a guide, and they help managers understand the factors to consider when they are setting their target capital structures.

 

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