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Corporate Finance

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Corporate Finance Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Corporate Finance Faculty

Latest Corporate Finance Research

Profiting from government stakes in a command economy: Evidence from Chinese asset sales

Authors
Yongxiang Wang and Charles Calomiris
Date
June 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

We document the market response to an unexpected announcement of proposed sales of government-owned shares in China. In contrast to the "privatization premium" found in earlier work, we find a negative effect of government ownership on returns at the announcement date and a symmetric positive effect in response to the announced cancellation of the government sell-off.

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Commentary: Does a Rising Tide Compensate for the Secession of the Successful? Illustrating the Effects of Business Improvement Districts on Municipal Coffers

Authors
Lynne Sagalyn
Date
June 1, 2010
Format
Chapter
Book
Municipal Revenues and Land Policies
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Are Increasing 5-Year Survival Rates Evidence of Success Against Cancer? A Reexamination Using Data from the U.S. and Australia

Authors
Frank Lichtenberg
Date
May 21, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Forum for Health Economics & Policy

Previous investigators argued that increasing 5-year survival for cancer patients should not be taken as evidence of improved prevention, screening, or therapy, because they found little correlation between the change in 5-year survival for a specific tumor and the change in tumor-related mortality. However, they did not control for the change in incidence, which influences mortality and is correlated with 5-year survival. The purpose of this study was to reexamine the question of whether increasing 5-year survival rates constitute evidence of success against cancer.

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Risky Human Capital and Deferred Capital Income Taxation

Authors
Borys Grochulski and Tomasz Piskorski
Date
May 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Theory

We study the structure of optimal wedges and capital taxes in a dynamic Mirrlees economy with endogenous distribution of skills. Human capital is a private, stochastic state variable that drives the skill process of each individual. Building on the findings of the labor literature, we construct a tractable life-cycle model of human capital evolution with risky investment and stochastic depreciation.

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Issuer Credit Quality and the Price of Asset-Backed Securities

Authors
Oliver Faltin-Traeger, Kathleen Johnson, and Christopher Mayer
Date
May 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings
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Market Valuation of Accrued Social Security Benefits

Authors
John Geanakoplos and Stephen Zeldes
Date
April 1, 2010
Format
Chapter
Book
Measuring and Managing Federal Financial Risk

One measure of the health of the Social Security system is the difference between the market value of the trust fund and the present value of benefits accrued to date. How should present values be computed for this calculation in light of future uncertainties? We think it is important to use market value. Since claims on accrued benefits are not currently traded in financial markets, we cannot directly observe a market value. In this paper, we use a model to estimate what the market price for these claims would be if they were traded.

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Inflation Risk and the Inflation Risk Premium

Authors
Geert Bekaert and Xiaozheng Wang
Date
April 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

This article starts by discussing the concept of "inflation hedging" and provides some estimates of "inflation betas" for standard bond and well-diversified equity indices for over 45 countries. We show that such standard securities are poor inflation hedges. Expanding the menu of assets to foreign bonds, real estate and gold only improves matters marginally. This indicates a potentially important role for inflation index linked bonds.

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Information Acquisition and Under-Diversification

Authors
Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh and Laura Veldkamp
Date
April 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Review of Economic Studies

If an investor wants to form a portfolio of risky assets and can exert effort to collect information on the future value of these assets before he invests, which assets should he learn about? The best assets to acquire information about are ones the investor expects to hold. But the assets the investor holds depend on the information he observes. We build a framework to solve jointly for investment and information choices, with general preferences and information cost functions.

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Equilibrium Impact of Demographic Changes on Asset Prices

Authors
John Donaldson, Angela Maddaloni, and Rajnish Mehra
Date
March 23, 2010
Format
Working Paper

We study a dynamic overlapping generations model where the population growth rate is stochastic, or can experience gradual but persistent changes. This leads to changes in the demographic makeup of the economy across the young, middle aged (who do the principal saving) and the old (who sell their assets to finance consumption).

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