Nike Inc. Case Number 2 Nike Incorporated’s cost of capital is a vital element when addressing opportunities regarding top-line growth and operating performance. Weighted Average Costs of Capital (WACC) is an essential estimation that is needed in order to determine the amount of interest that will be paid for each additional dollar financed. This translates to be the minimum overall required rate of return that the firm will keep. We disagree with Johanna Cohen’s assessment of Nike due to two
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Case Analysis of Nike‚ Inc.: Cost of Capital Apparently‚ the issue of Nike’s case is to control and check the calculation cost of capital done by Joanna Cohen who is the assistant of a portfolio manager at NorthPoint Group. But I am willing to tell you that it can be a complex case in which we can doubt about sensitivity analysis done by Kimi Ford (portfolio manager) because her assumptions such as Revenue Growth Rate‚ COGS / Sales‚ S &A / Sales‚ Current Assets / Sales‚ and Current Liability
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rate. D. reserve requirement. 10. _______ planning involves choosing specific work targets and assigning employees and teams to carry out plans. A. Contingency B. Operational C. Strategic D. Tactical 11. The Social Club is conducting a breakeven analysis to determine how many tickets it must sell at $15 each to break even on the Holiday Dance. Fixed costs are $2‚000‚ and
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Why is it also called the concept of prudence? Why is it not applied as strongly today as it used to be in the Past? Question 1(b) What is a Balance Sheet? How does a Funds Flow Statement differ from a Balance Sheet? Enumerate the items which are usually shown in a Balance Sheet and a Funds Flow Statement. Question 2(a) Discuss the importance of ratio analysis for inter-firm and intra-firm comparisons including circumstances responsible for its limitations. If any Question 2(b) Why do you understand
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Nike‚ Inc.: Cost of Capital EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Kimi Ford‚ a portfolio manager of North Point Group a large mutual fund management firm‚ is looking into the viability of investing in the stocks of Nike for the fund that she manages. Ford should base her decision on data on the company which were disclosed in the 2001 fiscal reports. While Nike management addressed several issues that are causing the decrease in market sales and prices of stocks‚ management presented its plans to improve and
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3.1 The concept of Sustainability Balance Scorecard (SBSC) Sustainability Balance Scorecard is the management tool which support the company developing their business with the sustainability value-based orientation. It means that the company which makes contribution to the sustainable development has to balance three dimensions of sustainability: Economic‚ Environmental and Social (F. Figge et al 2002. In the origin Balance Scorecard (BSC)‚ the company just displays their economic strategies‚ therefore
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Introduction This paper is a based on a case study of Nike. The paper will be discussing legal and ethical analysis and how the impact the operational/ ethical issues of the organization‚ the paper shall also be discussing the contribution factors and how the company’s corporate culture may have helped to minimize the unethical behavior or actually contributed to/caused the unethical behavior. The paper is also going to provide ethical decision factors‚ which are going to address or going to be
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According to the forecasts‚ New Balance will be seeing growth for the next three years. Currently‚ the facility is too small for the desired production and the company needs to expand. The best location for expansion is Texas. Exponential Smoothing Forecast In exponential smoothing forecast‚ more weight is given to recent data. This type of forecasting is ideal for data with no seasonality. Seasonality‚ or regular changes in the data‚ is not seen for New Balance. The forecast includes a damped
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cost of debt. Joanna calculated the cost of debt by taking the interest expense for 2001 and dividing it by the average debt balance. The cost of debt for Nike is the effective rate that it pays on its current debt‚ meaning the yield to maturity of bonds should be used to make an estimate instead of the average debt balance. Through the use of past data‚ the average balance of debt‚ the 4.3% before-tax cost of debt does not accurately reflect Nike’s current or future cost of debt‚ and therefore a
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|Corporate Finance | |Nike Case | | | | |
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