Finance is the business science concerned with the management of money, assets, and risk over time. It studies how value is created, allocated, and preserved under conditions of uncertainty. Finance links the present to the future, balancing opportunity and risk to guide decisions for individuals, firms, and governments.


Core Functions

  1. Corporate Finance
    • Capital structure: mix of debt and equity.
    • Investment decisions: project valuation, capital budgeting.
    • Dividend and payout policies.
    • Goal: maximize firm value while managing risk.
  2. Investments
    • Analysis of securities, markets, and portfolios.
    • Asset pricing models (CAPM, APT).
    • Portfolio theory and diversification.
    • Risk-return tradeoffs in equities, bonds, derivatives, and alternatives.
  3. Financial Institutions & Markets
    • Role of banks, exchanges, insurers, and intermediaries.
    • Liquidity, efficiency, and regulation of markets.
    • Monetary systems and credit flows.
  4. Personal Finance
    • Household budgeting, saving, investing, and retirement planning.
    • Risk management via insurance.
    • Credit management and debt planning.
  5. Public Finance
    • Government budgets, taxation, and expenditures.
    • Debt issuance and sovereign risk.
    • Interplay between fiscal policy and financial markets.

Methods


Theoretical Foundations


Role in Knowledge

As a business science, finance provides:


Distinction


Subfields Emerging Today


In the Logos Framework

Finance centers on Purpose, Scope, and Value:

It transforms uncertainty into structured decisions, making it one of the clearest expressions of Logos in economic life.