Essays about: "Business valuations"
Showing result 21 - 24 of 24 essays containing the words Business valuations.
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21. Business Valuation : How to Value Private Limited Knowledge Based Companies
University essay from IHH, FöretagsekonomiAbstract : Abstract Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate the methods used for valuating private limited knowledge based companies and if a new approach is required, create or modify a foundation that will constitute as a base within the valuation process. Method This is a qualitative study using interviews to obtain primary data. READ MORE
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22. Can strategic analysis through a market and resource based view prevent the founding of companies with an unsustainable business strategy?
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för företagande och ledningAbstract : The Resource-based and Market-based views (RBV and MBV) are two theoretical frameworks which try to find an optimal structure for business strategy by focusing on key strategic points to gain the maximum output or return. During the peak and later upheaval of what is often called the “dot. READ MORE
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23. The Family Business on the SSE : Family Ownership's Impact on a Valuation Process
University essay from IHH, EMM (Entrepreneurskap, Marknadsföring, Management)Abstract : The main purpose of this thesis is to investigate the differences between family and non-family businesses that are listed on the stock exchange, more specifically which factors that is being used in the valuation process and why family businesses as a rule seem to be undervalued. We also look at if family ownership is a factor in this process. READ MORE
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24. Behavioral Finance - And the Change of Investor Behavior during and After the Speculative Bubble At the End of the 1990s
University essay from Lunds universitet/Företagsekonomiska institutionenAbstract : The apparent high valuations in the aggregate market and the high price earnings ratios, experienced in the equity markets at the end of the 1990s, can be characterized as a so-called speculative bubble. The existence of such a phenomenon can in part be attributed to less-than-rational aspects of investor behavior and human judgment. READ MORE