In this situation, the manager of a public corporation faces two key decisions:
- Should he transact with outside investors and raise the necessary capital to invest in the project? The answer to this question determines the firm's investment policy .
- If the manager decides to raise external capital how should the investment be financed — with debt, with equity, or with some other security? The answer determines the firm's financing policy .
< In this book, the authors examine these decisions by assuming that the manager has private information about the firm's future cash flows. They provide a unified framework that yields new theoretical insights and explains many empirical anomalies documented in the literature.
< Readership: Master and doctoral level students in finance, academic researchers and financial managers.