Praise for Project Financing, First Edition "Owing to his teaching as a finance professor and as an experienced investment banker, John Finnerty brings to his book, Project Financing, an insightful perspective, blending the theoretical with the practical." --Zoltan Merszei, former chairman, president, and CEO, The Dow Chemical Company "Finnerty has managed to distill the complexities of project financing with its myriad components and variations. Clear, practical, and in-depth, Project Financing is a valuable user's guide for project sponsors, regulators, host governments (local and foreign), and financiers alike." --Ricardo M. Campoy, Director, Kilgore Minerals Ltd. "Project Financing warrants a place in the essential libraries of corporate financial managers, their advisors, senior strategists, bankers, large private investors, government officials, and anyone who aspires to master innovation in corporate finance." --Robert F. Bruner, Dean and Charles C. Abbott Professor of Business Administration, Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Virginia "This book is the first comprehensive treatment of project financing. It provides an invaluable contribution to financial management literature and practice." --Andrew H. Chen, Distinguished Professor of Finance, Southern Methodist University
This book is great to develop a good understanding of Principles of project finance. The treatment is practical and reiterates the concepts through case studies.
Good Text
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
If you're forced to read a project finance text for a college course or for any other reason, then this one is pretty good. The writing is crisp and clear, the case studies are genuinely helpful, the length is manageable, and the reader isn't overwhelmed with tiny print, mindnumbing details, or esoteric math. But let's face it, it IS still a finance text...hence my four-star rating.
Calculation error in Chapter 7 ?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Is there a calculation error in Chapter 7? The example is for calculating ATCF of Rocky Mountain project. The initial equipment investment of $55M is capitalized with $5M residual value. $5M of the $6M startup cost is also capitalized. However, the depreciation taken over the next 10 years is only $5M [$55M - $5)/10]. The capitalized $5M startup cost seems to be forgotten. Anyone else noticed this?
Amazing finance tool.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
One of the best books I've ever read. Extremely useful and updated. Strongly recommended.
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