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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

A maximum entropy joint demand estimation and capacity control policy

Authors
Serkan Eren and Costis Maglaras
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
POMS

We propose a tractable, data-driven demand estimation procedure based on the use of maximum entropy (ME) distributions, and apply it to a stochastic capacity control problem motivated from airline revenue management. Specifically, we study the two fare-class "Littlewood" problem in a setting where the firm has access to only potentially censored sales observations. We propose a heuristic that iteratively fits an ME distribution to all observed sales data, and in each iteration selects a protection level based on the estimated distribution.

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Strategic Asset Allocation with Predictable Returns and Transaction Costs

Authors
Pierre Collin-Dufresne, Kent Daniel, Ciamac Moallemi, and Mehmet Saglam
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Working Paper

We propose a simple approach to dynamic multi-period portfolio choice with quadratic transaction costs. The approach is tractable in settings with a large number of securities, realistic return dynamics with multiple risk factors, many predictor variables, and stochastic volatility. We obtain a closed-form solution for a trading rule that is optimal if the problem is restricted to a broad class of strategies we define as "linearity generating strategies" (LGS).

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Dynamic Pricing Strategies in the Presence of Demand Shifts

Authors
Omar Besbes and Denis Saure
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Manufacturing & Service Operations Management

Many factors introduce the prospect of changes for the demand environment that a firm faces, with the specifics of such changes not necessarily known in advance. If and when realized, such changes affect the delicate balance between demand and supply and thus should be anticipated to the extent possible. We study the dynamic pricing problem of a retailer facing the prospect of a change in the demand function during a finite selling season with no inventory replenishment opportunity.

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Habit Formation and Risk Preference Dependence

Authors
Larry Selden
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Working Paper

Reference dependent preferences have been applied in both risky and certainty settings, although little attention has been directed at the relationship between the reference points as well as the loss aversion functions for these models. This paper addresses this relationship for the special case where reference dependence corresponds to habit formation. Multiperiod Expected Utility habit or persistence models have spawned important contributions in asset pricing, life cycle consumption, business cycle analysis and monetary models.

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Identifying Channels of Credit Substitution When Bank Capital Requirements Are Varied

Authors
Shekhar Aiyar, Charles Calomiris, and Tomasz Wieladek
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Economic Policy

What kinds of credit substitution, if any, occur when changes to banks' minimum capital requirements induce them to change their willingness to supply credit? The question is of first-order importance given the emergence of "macro-prudential" policy regimes in the wake of the global financial crisis, under which regulatory tools — in particular, minimum capital ratio requirements for banks — will be employed to control the supply of bank credit as part of the effort to improve the resilience of the financial system.

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Who Consumes Firm Disclosures? Evidence from Public Conference Calls

Authors
Anne Heinrichs, Jihwon Park, and Eugene Soltes
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Working Paper
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Investors' Access to Corporate Management: A Field Experiment about 1-on-1 Calls

Authors
Anne Heinrichs
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Working Paper
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International Diversification Revisited

Authors
Robert Hodrick and Xiaoyan Zhang
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Working Paper

Using country index returns from 8 developed countries and 8 emerging market countries, we re-explore the benefits to international diversification over the past 30 years. To examine various theories in a comparable way, we intentionally limited ourselves to an examination of country index returns and a limited number of types of investments.

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Making Choices While Smelling, Tasting, and Listening: The Role of Sensory Similarity/Dissimilarity When Sequentially Sampling Products

Authors
Dipayan Biswas, Donald Lehmann, Lauren Labrecque, and Ereni Markos
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing
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