Joint Ventures: The benefits and perils - why some are successful and others fail

Business & Finance, Management & Leadership, Management
Cover of the book Joint Ventures: The benefits and perils - why some are successful and others fail by Thilo Trost, GRIN Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Thilo Trost ISBN: 9783656014133
Publisher: GRIN Publishing Publication: September 26, 2011
Imprint: GRIN Publishing Language: English
Author: Thilo Trost
ISBN: 9783656014133
Publisher: GRIN Publishing
Publication: September 26, 2011
Imprint: GRIN Publishing
Language: English

Research Paper (postgraduate) from the year 2011 in the subject Business economics - Business Management, Corporate Governance, grade: 1.3, Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen, language: English, abstract: The concept of the joint venture was developed in the United States. First, we need to make a distinction between purely contractual, non-equity joint ventures, on the one hand, and equity or corporate joint ventures, on the other. The regular form of joint venture is a company that is founded out of equity provided from two other entities. This venture is similar to a business partnership but limited to a specific project or purpose. The equity joint venture manifests the founding firms? willingness to cooperate by providing each a certain percentage of the common capital stock as illustrated in the graphic below (in this case with each partner providing half of the capital stock).There are countless ways to build up an equity joint venture with each partner providing only a certain percentage of the common capital stock (e.g. 70/30%, 90/10%, 51/49% and so forth). The firms gain control over the founded joint venture and share revenues, expenses and assets in equal proportion to their respective contributions to the venture?s registered capital. Differing arrangements are possible. Over the last decade, we were able to witness rapidly growing companies, some of them seeking for partnerships to take advantage of positive synergy effects to gain in size or to enter new foreign markets. The topic of this essay should be why firms seek to venture, what the benefits of venturing are and why some firms fail after the venture, what are the downsides of this concept?

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Research Paper (postgraduate) from the year 2011 in the subject Business economics - Business Management, Corporate Governance, grade: 1.3, Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen, language: English, abstract: The concept of the joint venture was developed in the United States. First, we need to make a distinction between purely contractual, non-equity joint ventures, on the one hand, and equity or corporate joint ventures, on the other. The regular form of joint venture is a company that is founded out of equity provided from two other entities. This venture is similar to a business partnership but limited to a specific project or purpose. The equity joint venture manifests the founding firms? willingness to cooperate by providing each a certain percentage of the common capital stock as illustrated in the graphic below (in this case with each partner providing half of the capital stock).There are countless ways to build up an equity joint venture with each partner providing only a certain percentage of the common capital stock (e.g. 70/30%, 90/10%, 51/49% and so forth). The firms gain control over the founded joint venture and share revenues, expenses and assets in equal proportion to their respective contributions to the venture?s registered capital. Differing arrangements are possible. Over the last decade, we were able to witness rapidly growing companies, some of them seeking for partnerships to take advantage of positive synergy effects to gain in size or to enter new foreign markets. The topic of this essay should be why firms seek to venture, what the benefits of venturing are and why some firms fail after the venture, what are the downsides of this concept?

More books from GRIN Publishing

Cover of the book Parent-Child-Relationships in Canadian Literature (King, Thomas: Green Grass, Running Water; Laurence, Margaret: A Bird in the House) by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Moving towards a new paradigm of collaboration. The influence of current automotive trends on mobility business models and competitive advantage of traditional German OEMs by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Computer Mediated Communication by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Leadership & Change - How to implement change in an all-male & all-scientist team? by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Stereotypes in Internet Memes. A Linguistic Analysis by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Postcolonial London by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Jean Jaques Rousseau's Concept of Society and Government: A Study of the Social Contract by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Die österreichische Umsatzsteuernovelle 2010 by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book The change from an Anglo-Saxon to a Christian society. Problems of time and narrative in 'The Wanderer' by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book The Syntactic Structure of Verb-Particle Constructions by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Traffic Planning in China - Need for and possibility of integrated traffic planning in the People's Republic of China by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Exclamative sentences - a basic sentence type? by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Cyberspace and Profits by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Electoral systems in Australia and Germany - a comparative study by Thilo Trost
Cover of the book Wild(e) Times - Sexual Deviance in Henry James's 'The Turn of the Screw' by Thilo Trost
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy