Corporate governance and Auditing Introduction Corporate governance is a method that the proprietors and financial providers of a business exercises power and necessitate accountability for the assets that is trusted to the business. The proprietors choose a board of directors to be responsible for overseeing the business’s actions and accountability to interested parties. Many parties have a stake in the quality of an organization’s corporate governance. In this assignment, I will discuss two
Words: 1926 - Pages: 8
CASE STUDY: THE ROLE OF CAPITAL MARKET INTERMEDIARIES IN THE DOT-COM CRASH OF 2000 Question 1 Venture Capitalists: The intended role should be to fund effectively picked out unlisted growth companies with promising business ideas and talented value driven management teams from those companies that do not reflect these characteristics. As VC’s typically encounter high risk upon investing, they also demand a high return that often comes in the form of a sell out of shares after an IPO. Putting
Words: 693 - Pages: 3
to each other (Livingstone, 2009, P. 4). The SOX is the first step in holding companies accountable and is a model for accounting practice reform. The SOX controls auditors’ independence and responsibility by fighting business fraud and improving corporate governance. Tsui (2009) stated that “the SOX increases personal liabilities of senior management and introduces extremely cumbersome compliance processes” (p. 22). Raghavan (2007) explains that: “In CFO Research Services’ survey of 180 finance
Words: 2868 - Pages: 12
a. Should Caledonia focus on cash flows or accounting profits in making its capital-budgeting decisions? Should the company be interested in incremental cash flows, incremental profits, total free cash flows, or total profits? Caledonia should focus on cash flows, not accounting profits. Free cash flows are able to be reinvested, whereas accounting profits are shown when they are earned, not when the cash is actually received. The company should be interested in incremental after-tax cash flows
Words: 932 - Pages: 4
Synopsis of Adelphia Communication Issue in the Scenario that is facing the company Adelphia Communications was a publicly held company owned mostly by the founder John Rigas and his family. Adelphia had a board of directors the consisted of nine people, five of them appointed by the Rigas. Over a five year period of time the Rigas family “loaned” $3.1 billion dollars from Adelphia. This was $800 million more than what was initially reported during an SEC investigation (Patsuris, 2002). These “loans”
Words: 800 - Pages: 4
Organizational Structure MGT 230 April 8, 2012 Dr. John Opinski Organizational Structure Organization and planning are an essential asset for organization’s to attain the highest level of efficiency and achieve success. Microsoft is an organization with a structure composed of a chief executive officer (CEO), who is Steve Ballmer, a board of directors, executives, and senior and technical leaders. Microsoft has grown since it was founded in1975 and is currently a worldwide leader in services
Words: 1010 - Pages: 5
the new enhanced standards are necessary. 3. Evaluate the benefits and costs of the SOX. 1. Analyze the new or enhanced standards for all U.S. public company boards, management, and public accounting firms that the SOX required. Corporate governance becoming increasingly subject to stakeholder scrutiny, compliance to and deployment of a set of financial management standards has become mandatory for the board of directors of most organizations. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (Pub
Words: 1262 - Pages: 6
irrelevant since the value of the leveraged firm equals the value of the unleveraged firm. When they included corporate taxes, the benefits leaned toward the leveraged firm as the value increased over the unleveraged firm by the amount of taxes time their debt. MM then included personal taxes into the theory, which shows that financing with debt is still better but not as much as with only corporate taxes. As there trade-off theory states, it is important to find the balance between costs and benefits
Words: 462 - Pages: 2
Risks analysis: * Cash flow risk. Since the company opened its business, it reported $1.2 billion in accounting loss, and its operating cash flows had been negative almost every quarter. Operating cash flow ratio measures how well current liabilities are covered by the cash flow generated from a company's operations. All the ratios are less than 1, which means that Amazon has generated less cash over the year than it needs to pay off short-term liabilities as at the year end. This may signal
Words: 309 - Pages: 2
CHAPTER 21 MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS (Difficulty: E = Easy, M = Medium, and T = Tough) Multiple Choice: Conceptual Easy: Merger tactics Answer: e Diff: E [i]. Firms use defensive tactics to fight off undesired mergers. These tactics include a. Raising antitrust issues. b. Taking poison pills. c. Getting a white knight to bid for the firm. d. Repurchasing their own stock. e. All of the statements above are correct. Mergers Answer: d Diff:
Words: 3602 - Pages: 15