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Capital Allocation
The research shows that companies that are more proactive in their internal resource allocation generate a higher ROA than those that are more conservative.
There is also evidence that companies that are good at internal capital allocation are also effective at external allocation
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
A more suitable mindset is that capital is accessible but comes at a cost...
many executives act as if the cash that the business generates is essentially free. The right mindset is that all capital, whether from an internal or external source, has an opportunity cost.
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
“What is the right amount of capital (and the right number of people) to have in this business in order to support the strategy that will create the most wealth?”182 The answer is based on the future and does not rule out reducing net investment when appropriate.
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
Capital allocation is ultimately about assessing opportunities and executing on the ones that are attractive. As such, it requires a willingness to be a buyer or a seller given the circumstances.
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
In an ideal world, corporate executives would allocate capital to maximize long-term value per share. But, for reasons that are mostly understandable, there’s a lot of evidence that they fall short of this objective
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
Firms should invest in innovation while cutting losses when a strategy is unlikely to pay off. This is an explicit recognition of the value of quitting
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
Capital allocation should support a company’s strategic goals. Capital allocation should start with an assessment and approval of strategies and then determine which projects support the strategies.
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
Great capital allocators always have a sense of the difference between price and value in all of their businesses. And, as important, they are willing to act to build value when those gaps become large enough to overcome frictions such as taxes and fees.
Dan Callahan • Capital Allocation
Cash deals do better, on average, than deals funded with equity or a combination of cash and equity.36 The basic idea is that management of the buyer will finance a deal with cash if it thinks the stock of its company is undervalued and will use stock if it thinks it is overvalued. Cash deals also provide a higher payoff for the shareholders of the
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