Corporate Finance

Corporate finance deals with the capital structure of a corporation, including its funding and the actions that management takes to increase the value of the company. Corporate finance also includes the tools and analysis utilized to prioritize and distribute financial resources.

The ultimate purpose of corporate finance is to maximize the value of a business through planning and implementation of resources while balancing risk and profitability.

Every decision made in a business has financial implications, and any decision that involves the use of money is a corporate financial decision. Defined broadly, everything that a business does fits under the rubric of corporate finance. It is, in fact, unfortunate that we even call the subject corporate finance, because it suggests to many observers a focus on how large corporations make financial decisions and seems to exclude small and private businesses from its purview. A more appropriate title for this discipline would be Business Finance, because the basic principles remain the same, whether one looks at large, publicly traded firms or small, privately run businesses. All businesses have to invest their resources wisely, find the right kind and mix of financing to fund these investments, and return cash to the owners if there are not enough good investments.

  • Preparation of Project Report
  • Preparation of CMA data for bank loans
  • Private placement of shares, Inter-Corporate Deposit, Terms loans, working capital limits, etc.
  • Private placement
  • Inter-corporate loans
  • Inter-corporate deposits (ICD)
  • Working Capital Loan
  • Terms loans
  • External Credit Borrowings (ECBs)
 
     
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