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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

Venture Capital as Human Resource Management

Authors
Charles Calomiris, Antonio Gledson de Carvalho, and Joao Amaro de Matos
Date
May 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economics and Business

Venture capitalists add value to portfolio firms by obtaining and transferring information about senior managers across firms over time. Information transfer occurs on a significant scale and takes place both among a single venture capitalist's portfolio firms and between different venture capitalists' firms via a network of venture capitalists, which venture capitalists use to locate and relocate managers. Cross-sectional differences are associated with differences in the intensity with which venture capitalists network.

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The Execution Game

Authors
Ciamac Moallemi, Beomsoo Park, and Benjamin Van Roy
Date
April 28, 2008
Format
Working Paper

We consider a trader who aims to liquidate a large position in the presence of an arbitrageur who hopes to profit from the trader's activity. The arbitrageur is uncertain about the trader's position and learns from observed price fluctuations. This is a dynamic game with asymmetric information. We present an algorithm for computing perfect Bayesian equilibrium behavior and conduct numerical experiments. Our results demonstrate that the trader's strategy differs significantly from one that would be optimal in the absence of the arbitrageur.

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Agency Conflicts, Investment, and Asset Pricing

Authors
Neng Wang and Rui Albuquerque
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

The separation of ownership and control allows controlling shareholders to pursue private benefits. We develop an analytically tractable dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model to study asset pricing and welfare implications of imperfect investor protection. Consistent with empirical evidence, the model predicts that countries with weaker investor protection have more incentives to overinvest, lower Tobin's q, higher return volatility, larger risk premia, and higher interest rate.

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Correlated Trading and Returns

Authors
Gur Huberman, Daniel Dorn, and Paul Sengmueller
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

A German broker's clients place similar speculative trades and therefore tend to be on the same side of the market in a given stock during a given day, week, month, and quarter. Aggregate liquidity effects, short sale constraints, the systematic execution of limit orders (coordinated through price movements) or the correlated trading of other investors who pick off retail limit orders, do not fully explain why retail investors trade similarly. Correlated market orders lead returns, presumably due to persistent speculative price pressure.

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A Bayesian Framework for Combining Value Estimates

Authors
Kenton K Yee
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting

Obtaining more accurate equity value estimates is the starting point for stock selection, value-based indexing in a noisy market, and beating benchmark indices through tactical style rotation. Unfortunately, discounted cash flow, method of comparables, and fundamental analysis typically yield discrepant valuation estimates. Moreover, the valuation estimates typically disagree with market price. Can one form a superior valuation estimate by averaging over the individual estimates, including market price?

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Centralization versus Decentralization: An Application to Price Setting by a Multi-Market Firm

Authors
Ricardo Alonso, Wouter Dessein, and Niko Matouschek
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the European Economic Association

This paper compares centralized and decentralized price setting by a firm that sells a single product in two markets, but is constrained to set one price (e.g., due to arbitrage). Each market is characterized by a different linear demand function, and demand conditions are privately observed by a local manager. This manager only cares about profits in his own market and, as a result, communicates his information strategically. Our main results link organizational design to market demand.

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The Subprime Turmoil: What's Old, What's New, and What's Next

Authors
Charles Calomiris
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Chapter
Book
Maintaining Stability in a Changing Financial System

We are currently experiencing a major shock to the financial system, initiated by problems in the subprime mortgage market, which spread to securitization products and credit markets more generally. Banks are being asked to increase the amount of risk that they absorb (by moving off-balance sheet assets onto their balance sheets), but losses that the banks have suffered limit their capacity to absorb those risky assets.

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International Financial Management

Authors
Geert Bekaert and Robert Hodrick
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Book
Publisher
Prentice Hall

Bekaert and Hodrick equip future business leaders with the analytical tools they need to make sound financial decisions in the face of a competitive global environment. For undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in an international finance course.

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On the Informational Usefulness of R&D Capitalization and Amortization

Authors
Baruch Lev, Doron Nissim, and Jacob Thomas
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Chapter
Book
Visualising Intangibles: Measuring and Reporting in the Knowledge Economy

Under U.S. GAAP, reported balance sheet and income statements are based on immediate expensing of R&D expenditures. We capitalize those expenditures and derive adjusted equity book values and earnings using simple amortization techniques (straight-line over assumed industry-specific useful lives). After confirming that such adjustments increase the association of book values/earnings with contemporaneous stock prices (and future earnings), we examine the relation between those adjustments and future returns.

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