Synopses & Reviews
Hospitality Financial Management by Robert E. Chatfield and Michael C. Dalbor is an up-to-date introductory finance text written. specifically for hospitality and tourism majors. The book uses hospitality examples to cover concepts tram a practical perspective, explaining and demonstrating the importance of financial management in the hospitality industry.
The text covers such important topics as an introduction to financial markets and instruments, a review of financial statements, risk and return, tithe and value of money; stock and bond valuation, capital budgeting, plus hotel market studies/appraisals and capital structure of the firm. Key features include:
- Up-to-date hospitality examples
- Chapter exhibits connect chapter concepts with hospitality companies
- Practical applications
- Step-by-step guides to using financial calculators
- Capital budgeting project examples
Written in a clear and easy to understand format, Hospitality Financial Management is designed to equip readers with a basic knowledge of the financial management function in the hospitality industry.
Synopsis
This up-to-date introduction to finance, written for those in hospitality careers, explains and demonstrates the importance of financial management within the hospitality organization. This clear and concise book provides many examples and is primarily based on practical applications and less on theoretical foundations—keeping hospitality professionals tuned into finance without intimidating them with a typical ¿finance¿ book. Financial Markets and Financial Instruments; Review of Financial Statements and Selected Ratios; The Relationship Between Risk and Return; Time Value of Money; Fixed Income Securities: Bonds & Preferred Stock; Common Stock Features; Cost of Capital; Capital Budgeting and Cash Flow Estimation; Capital Budgeting Decision Methods; Hotel Valuation; and Capital Structure. For those in hospitality/travel tourism professions.
About the Author
Robert E. Chatfield is professor of finance and director of MBA programs at the College of Business, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Previously, he was an associate professor of finance at Texas Tech University and an assistant professor of finance at the University of New Mexico.
Professor Chatfield has been teaching financial management for over 25 years and has taught financial management to hospitality students at UNLV for the past 15 years. He has worked as a financial consultant to the gaming industry in Las Vegas. He has also received teaching excellence awards both at Texas Tech University and Purdue University.
Professor Chatfield has been a productive researcher, publishing in a number of leading finance journals, including Financial Management, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, the Financial Review, International Journal of Forecasting, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Quarterly Journal of Business and Economics, and Journal of Economics and Business.
Professor Chatfield enjoys athletics and especially likes to participate in tennis, white-water rafting, and is a novice ballroom dancer.
Michael C. Dalbor is an assistant professor in the William F. Harrah College of Hotel Administration at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He holds a B.S. in Food Service and Housing Administration from the Pennsylvania State University and an M.B.A. in finance from Loyola College in Maryland. He also holds a Ph.D. in Hotel, Restaurant, and Institutional Finance from the Pennsylvania State University.
He has published articles in the Journal of Hospitality Tourism Research, the Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, the Appraisal Journal, the International Journal of Hospitality Management, and the Journal of Hospitality Financial Management. He is active in the Association of Hospitality Financial Management Education and the Council on Hotel, Restaurant, and Institutional Education. He has worked in various management positions in the hospitality industry, including food and beverage management and as a purchasing agent. He has also conducted numerous market analyses and feasibility studies as a hotel consultant and has been a commercial real estate appraiser specializing in hotel valuation.
Table of Contents
(Note:
Each chapter begins with an Introduction and concludes with a Summary, Glossary, Vignette, and Questions and Problems section.)
1. Introduction.
The Relationship of Financial Management to Other Functional Areas of Management. Organization of the Firm. A Basic Understanding of Financial Management. Wealth Maximization. A General Outline of the Textbook.
2. Financial Markets and Financial Instruments.
Why People Invest. Capital Markets. Money Market. Raising Financial Capital and Security Trading. Financial Markets and Hedging Risk. Key Financial Intermediaries: Lenders to the Hospitality Industry. Stock Market Performance.
3. Review of Financial Statements and Selected Ratios.
Review of the Income Statement. Review of the Balance Sheet. Relationship Between the Income Statement and the Balance Sheet. Statement of Retained Earnings. Statement of Cash Flows. Validity of Financial Statements. Ratio Analysis. Perspectives on and Limitations of Ratio Analysis.
4. The Relationship Between Risk and Return.
How Typical Investors Feel About Risk. Returns and Distributions. Diversification. The Market Portfolio. The Market Portfolio and Beta. Beta, Expected Return and the Security Market Line.
5. Time Value of Money.
Future Value—Compounding. Present Value—Discounting. Future Value of an Annuity. Present Value of an Annuity. Perpetuity—An Infinite Annuity. Present Value of a Series of Non-Constant Cash Flows. Compounding Periods Other Than Annual. Effective Annual Rates. Amortized Loans.
6. Fixed Income Securities: Bonds & Preferred Stock.
Basic Bond Terminology. Bond Features. Bond Ratings. Valuing Corporate Bonds. Computing Yield to Maturity on Corporate Bonds. Bonds with Semi-Annual Coupon Payments. Basic Preferred Stock Terminology. Preferred Stock Features. Valuing Preferred Stock.
7. Common Stock.
Common Stock Features. Valuing Common Stock. General Dividend Valuation Model. Zero-Growth Dividend Valuation Model. Constant-Growth Dividend Valuation Model. Valuing Common Stock with Multiple Growth Rates. Common Stock Value, Investors Rate of Return and Growth.
8. Cost of Capital.
The Weighted Average Cost of Capital. Estimating the Cost of Capital Components. The Cost of Debt. The Cost of Preferred Stock. Internal Common Equity—New Retained Earnings. Dividend Valuation Model Method for Estimating the Cost of Internal Equity. The Bond Yield Plus Risk Premium Method for Estimating the Cost of Internal Equity. External Common Equity—New Issues of Common Stock. Computation of the Weighted Average Cost of Capital. Using the Weighted Average Cost of Capital.
9. Introduction to Capital Budgeting and Cash Flow Estimation.
Classifying Capital Budgeting Projects. The Captial Budgeting Decision and Cash Flow Estimation.
10. Capital Budgeting Decision Methods.
Captial Budgeting Decision Methods. Independent Projects and Capital Budgeting Decision Methods. Mutually Exclusive Projects and Capital Budgeting. Not Normal Cash Flows. The Use of Captial Budgeting Decision Methods.
11. An Introduction to Hotel Valuation.
Reasons for a Hotel Appraisal. The Hotel Appraisal Process. Approaches to Value. A Rule of Thumb Approach and Revenue Multipliers. Final Reconciliation of Value.
12. Capital Structure.
Financial Risk. Business Risk. Capital Structure Theory. Other Significant Factors in the Determination of a Firms Capital Structure.