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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper that presents a case study of a financial deal a team has developed. The question is whether or not to leave out or put a positive spin on some financials that appear to be disturbing. The writer discusses the issues, ethics, impact on stakeholders, alternative actions and recommended action. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGfncdl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
some financial data that, upon first consideration, looks disturbing. This information will likely cause the senior management team to disapprove the deal. Pat, who is the marketing manager and
a member of the team, wants the team to either omit that information or put a positive spin on it. The financials that are disturbing would most likely not seriously
jeopardize the two parties in the deal. Joe, the credit manager, believes the information should be fully disclosed but he says if the rest of the team wants them to
put a positive spin on those financials, he will go along with them. The primary goals of the team are to develop a deal that will benefit both clients
as well as the bank. That means there could be thousands of stakeholders involved. First, there are the shareholders of each of the tree organizations, the two clients and the
bank. Shareholders want the company to earn strong profits, thus, increasing the value of their stock. Given todays climate, it is doubtful there would be a majority of shareholders who
would want any of the three companies to enter into a deal that could backfire, bringing the SEC into the picture to perform an audit of the deal. The
executives involved are obviously stakeholders because their jobs ride on their successful performance, which means they must increase revenues and net profit margins. Any act that is questionable could well
result in their dismissal from the company. Employees at all three organizations are stakeholders because if a company is found at fault by the SEC and the deal is such
that it causes the company to file bankruptcy, the employees will lose their jobs and possibly their pensions. Finally, consumers are stakeholders. Consumers today expect companies to conduct business
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