THE KEY TO UNDERSTANDING COMPANY GROWTH AND DECLINE —FROM THE UNDISPUTED EXPERT ON VALUATION
Throughout his storied career, Aswath Damodaran has searched for the universal key to demystify corporate finance and valuation. Now, at last, he offers the groundbreaking answer to readers everywhere.
It turns out there is a corporate lifecycle very much like our own — with unique stages of growth and decline. And just as we must learn to act our age, so too must companies.
By better understanding how corporations age and the characteristics of each stage of their lifecycle, we can unlock the secrets behind any businesses behavior and optimize our management and investment decisions accordingly.
In Aswath Damodaran’s The Corporate Lifecycle , readers will learn—
As the corporate lifecycle touches virtually every aspect of business, this book is for anyone with skin in the corporate finance game—from managers to investors, from novices to seasoned pros. Aswath Damodaran’s The Corporate Lifecycle is the definitive guide to understanding businesses growth, behavior, and value.
Aswath Damodaran is a Professor of Finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University (Kerschner Family Chair in Finance Education). He is well known as the author of several widely used academic and practitioner texts on Valuation, Corporate Finance and Investment Management; as well as a provider of comprehensive data for valuation purposes.
lightbulb (idea) moment =>product/mkt fit =>Bar Mitzvah =>scaling up test =>midlife crisis =>end game (Day 2) Start up =>Young Growth =>High Growth =>Mature Growth =>Mature Stable =>Decline Dog yrs for tech vs capital intensive industries Pricing (narative driven) vs Valuation (numbers: cash flow/liquidation driven) Investor base: traders/retail/VC vs investors/institutions/PE CEO skills required: visionary =>pragmatist =>builder/hyperscaler =>opportunist =>defender =>liquidator
Diversify your portfolio across life cycles. Different mkt regimes reward different companies in different life cycles. Eg after a financial crisis when investors seek safety =>mature cash flow generating companies viewed as safe & solid tend to be sought after. Whereas in a growth bubble (2000 tech bubble, 2023-current Mag 7, AI driven bubble) =>early stage VC funded startups, young growth companies outperform staid old companies. https://youtu.be/fmlPJBxzpMo?si=uN-MR...