Best of
Accounting

2000

Managing By The Numbers: A Commonsense Guide To Understanding And Using Your Company's Financials


Chuck Kremer - 2000
    In Managing by the Numbers, business education and accounting experts Chuck Kremer and Ron Rizzuto team up with open-book management authority John Case to demystify the numbers. They present a practical, common-sense approach to reading financial statements and to managing the three bottom lines of business financial performance: net profit, operating cash flow, and return on assets. The book features numerous exercises and examples (with associated templates available on the Web), a powerful new management tool known as “The Financial Scoreboard,” and an extensive glossary. Managing by the Numbers is an essential resource for entrepreneurs, business owners, managers, and anyone eager to improve their mastery of the financial side of running a business.

Intermediate Accounting, Volume 2


Donald E. Kieso - 2000
    Intermediate Accounting integrates this new information throughout the chapters so they'll learn how to apply the new global accounting standards. Global examples are presented to clearly show how the information is utilised in the field. The use of various currencies is also explored, which is critical for accountants to know in today's global businesses environment.

Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation


Stephen H. Penman - 2000
    Students learn to view a firm through its financial statements and to carry out the appropriate financial statement analysis to value the firm's debt and equity. The book takes an activist approach to investing, showing how the analyst challenges the current market price of a share by analyzing the fundamentals. With a careful assessment of accounting quality, accounting comes to life as it is integrated with the modern theory of finance to develop practical analysis and valuation tools for active investing.

Introduction To Finance


Lawrence J. Gitman - 2000
    Developments in financial markets and investments necessitate that students be exposed to these topics as well as to financial management, the traditional focus of the introductory finance course. Introduction to Finance develops the three components of finance in an interactive framework that is consistent with the responsibilities of all financial professionals, managers, intermediaries, and investors in today's economy. To show the interrelationships between the areas of finance, the text emphasizes how investor activities monitor firms and focuses on the role of financial markets in channeling funds from investors to firms. *The integrative Gitman/Madura model focuses on the role of financial markets in channeling funds from investors to firms. This approach lends continuity to coverage of financial markets, financial management, and investments. *Corporate finance serves as the backbone of the text. This helps ease the transition for professors used to teaching financial management who are teaching the survey course for the first time. It also makes the

Accounting Theory and Practice


M.W.E. Glautier - 2000
    It provides a solid theoretical background and emphasizes the practical uses of accounting as an aid to decision-making.