Archive for the ‘joint ventures’ Category

Joint Ventures – How To Profit From Them!
All about joint ventures – the quickest way to skyrocket your profits!
Want to find out how to set up joint ventures, how to find willing partners, how to attracty them, and how to set up and profit from the joint venture partnership?
Joint Venture Profits:
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Joint Ventures:
In a joint ventures, what are the ways it can be harmful?
Most commonly has to do with conflicts of power and money.
India, Russia sign NUCLEAR pacts, seal Gorshkov deal
New Delhi, March 13 (ANI): India and Russia inked several pacts including civil nuclear cooperation and supply and joint development of military hardware during a hectic daylong visit of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to New Delhi on Friday. The two countries also upgraded their nuclear co-operation with Russia pledging to build up to 16 nuclear reactors for power stations in India. Russia will build more than 1,000 stealth fighter jets within four decades, including at least 200 for its traditional weapons buyer India. Russia is also expected a joint venture with the state-run Indian company Hindustan Aeronautics Limited to manufacture around 200 fifth-generation fighter jets.
Duration : 0:2:57
Examples of Strategic alliances, joint ventures and mergers please….?
Can you please give me real cases where companies have merged together, had a strategic alliance of some sort or had a joint venture, preferably in the car industry, but any sector or industry will do!
Any links will be appreciated… the best answer gets 10 pts!
I would look towards the banking and especially the airline industry. In the latter, ‘One World Alliance’ and ‘Star Alliance’ and so forth are merely strategic alliances (not mergers or acquisitions) which are more powerful than most people expect. I used to work for an oil company which was very squeezed by these alliances in terms of price and service.
Some airlines within these alliances have gone further and combine flight operations while dividing marketing and so on. It gets quite complicated but look for Swiss vs. TAM, or Iberia and LAN, or BA and Iberia, SAS and BA and so on.
In terms of banking, look at the history of companies such as JPMorgan Chase (-cum-Bear Sterns), or UBS Warburg (now Warburg again), or RBS and Natwest.
In the car industry Ford is an excellent example. They went on a shopping spree under Jacques Nasser in the late 1990s and early 2000s, especially buying up companies to form part of their Premier Auto Group (PAG) – including Jaguar, Volvo, Land Rover (I think?) and so on. They also bought Kwik Fit (a UK repairshop that was later sold to private equity investors), and they have the world’s largest or second largest retail credit company (Ford Finance, which in itself joined arms with Mitsubishi finance for a time).
Ford is a typical example of an organisation which was committed to a Matrix strategy (see papers by Karel Williams and Julie Froud).
I also think that many automakers try to press down prices on steel, aluminium and spare parts – one prominent way of doing this is to combine forces and pressure the supplier. It’s had limited success.
Learn How Easy Joint Venture Deal Making Can Really Be
From http://www.hardtofindseminars.com This is one of the best presentations on the subject of Joint Venture deal making I have ever heard. John Alanis delivered this presentation to a packed house of seminar attendees that paid thousands of dollars in the year 2000 at a Ron LeGrand information-publishing seminar. The seminar was called The Information Marketing Boot Camp. It is as hard-hitting and basic as the name implies. Hear more to learn how easy joint venture deal making can really be!
Duration : 0:9:59
In joint ventures, what % does a venturer invest for the venture’s gross profit to be included in its own FS?
This is an accounting question.
The money invested into the joint venture would typically show up in the Income Statement under Investments – which typically fall under the non-operating section of the income statement (eg after you have taken gross profit yet before you deduct taxes and other irregular items to calculate net income.
On the balance sheet, you would see investments fall under the Long Term Assets category.
I think for a publicly traded company in the united states, there are certain specific rules under Sarbanes Oxley which determine at what level (or dollar amount) that an investment is considered "significant" which means that it has to show up on the financial statements – typically all investments are added together and presented as one figure. However, since I am not a CPA, I don’t know exactly what that rule is.
http://stocksbuyorsell.com
Property Joint Ventures – How 17 yr old Ross Bailey raised £100,000 of someone elses money
www.progressiveproperty.co.uk/event – How Ross Bailey (17) raised £100,000 of someone elses money to start his property business. You can do the same using joint ventures
Duration : 0:10:43
What type of joint ventures do you think Apple and Dell could drum up? Who would be a great respresentation of
why would a growing innovative company like Apple want a joint venture with a dying Dell.
Private equity funds and joint ventures?
What’s the difference between a private equity fund and a joint venture? Are they interrelated? Does one invest in the other? Thanks!
The two have nothing to do with each other.
A joint venture is any time 2 entities join together to form one entity, I use the term entity because while itusually is two companies this does not have to be the case. The new entity is separate from the original 2 entities but is owned by them. As an expamle several years ago Sone wanted into the cell phone handset business and Ericson was having technology problems i their cell phine handset division. The two companies decided that they could compete better together so they formed a joint veture owned by both of them called Sony Ericson to make handsets. Ericson is still a separate company that make such things as network infrastructure components. Sony is still a separate company that makes consumer electronics. The JV company is a jointly owned company that makes handsets.
A private equity fund is a partnership, this is the usual legal structure but I am sure there are other ways to set them up, that will buy out companies completly sometimes in a Joint venture with other companies or privaste equity funds with the aim of somehow unlocking hidden value. This could be by changing the way the company operates, how it is financed, changing managment, or spliting the company into smaller pieces, and even at times merging them with another company. Whatever the method the aim is to make a stronger, more competitive, and more valuable companies. Private equity funds also find small companies that are already in good shape but need financing to grow they may but these companies or part of them with the same aim of making them stronger, and more competitive this is usually by providing the financial backing the company needs to grow but can not get on its own.
Just a brief description of each but I hope this helps



2006 Manta MKII Joint Venture