Any financial activity that deals with a company and its money. These include raising capital and mergers and acquisitions.
This area of law involves advising clients on mergers and acquisitions, takeovers, stock exchange floatations and the like.
The management/deployment of funds for companies. The processes by which companies raise capital, especially to fund growth, acquisitions etc; The division of an investment bank which advises on acquisitions, mergers, restructuring and disposal of division and/or assets.
One of the three areas of the discipline of finance. It deals with the operation of the firm (both the investment decision and the financing decision) from the firm's point of view.
a discipline dealing with the firm's operations with regard to investing and financing
The process of raising capital (equity or long-term debt) on behalf of corporations and governments. Corporate finance has traditionally been a speciality of merchant banks in London and of investment banks in New York. Corporate Identity: The collection of characteristics that uniquely identify an organisation; for example, the arches in the “M†of McDonald’s, the colour of the pumps at a Shell filling station, or the environmentally friendly ethos of the Body Shop.
Activities in the fields of mergers, acquisitions, privatisations, advisory services and debt or equity origination.
General term for capital market-related services to finance mergers, acquisitions, buyouts, etc.
Corporate finance is a specific area of finance dealing with the financial decisions corporations make and the tools as well as analysis used to make these decisions. The primary goal of Corporate finance is to enhance corporate value, without taking excessive financial risks.