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Asset Management

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

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Latest on Asset Management

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Asset Management Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Asset Management

Four Princesses, Meet the Fantastic Four: Disney's 2009 Acquisition of Marvel

Authors
Laurie Simon Hodrick
Date
May 1, 2012
Format
Case Study
Publisher
Columbia CaseWorks

In August 2009 Marvel Entertainment considers a merger with the Walt Disney Company. If Marvel shareholders approve the deal, each Marvel shareholder will receive $30 in cash and 0.7452 shares of Disney per Marvel share, together worth $50 - or a 29 premium over Marvel's stock price at that point in time.

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Hedge Funds and Chapter 11

Authors
Wei Jiang, Kai Li, and Wei Wang
Date
April 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Journal of Finance

This paper studies the presence of hedge funds in the Chapter 11 process and their effects on bankruptcy outcomes. Hedge funds strategically choose positions in the capital structure where their actions could have a bigger impact on value. Their presence, especially as unsecured creditors, helps balance power between the debtor and secured creditors.

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The Success Equation: Untangling Skill and Luck in Business, Sports, and Investing

Authors
Michael Mauboussin
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Book
Publisher
Harvard Business School Press

"Much of what we experience in life results from a combination of skill and luck." — From the Introduction

The trick, of course, is figuring out just how many of our successes (and failures) can be attributed to each — and how we can learn to tell the difference ahead of time.

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The Real Effects of Financial Markets: The Impact of Prices on Takeovers

Authors
Alex Edmans, Itay Goldstein, and Wei Jiang
Date
January 1, 2012
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

This paper provides evidence of the real effects of financial markets. Using mutual fund redemptions as an instrument for price changes, we identify a strong effect of market prices on takeover activity (the "trigger effect"). An inter-quartile decrease in valuation leads to a 7 percentage point increase in acquisition likelihood, relative to a 6% unconditional takeover probability. Instrumentation addresses the fact that prices are endogenous and increase in anticipation of a takeover (the "anticipation effect").

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Performance Maximization of Actively Managed Funds

Authors
Paolo Guasoni, Gur Huberman, and Zhenyu Wang
Date
September 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finanical Economics

A growing literature suggests that even in the absence of any ability to predict returns, holding options on the benchmarks or trading frequently can generate positive alpha. The ratio of alpha to its tracking error appraises a fund's performance. This paper derives the performance-maximizing strategy, which turns out to be a variant of a buy-write strategy, and the least upper bound on such performance enhancement. If common equity indices are used as benchmarks, the potential alpha generated from trading frequently can be substantial in magnitude, but it carries considerable risk.

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Shimer Meets the Production Based Asset Pricing Crowd: Labor Search and Asset Returns

Authors
John Donaldson and Hyung Seok Eric Kim
Date
April 5, 2011
Format
Working Paper

Beginning with Shimer (2005) and Hall(2005), a recent branch of the business cycle literature has explored the role of wage rigidity in accounting for the statistical characteristics of key labor market variables; in particular high vacancy and unemployment volatility and a high negative correlation between the two. As a further exploration, we extend the Mortensen-Pissarides structure of period-by-period Nash wage bargaining to an environment where there is labor force heterogeneity (permanently employed "insiders" and "outsiders" subject to separations) and limited asset market parti

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The Asset Pricing Implications of Priced Structural Parameter Uncertainty

Authors
Michael Johannes
Date
April 1, 2011
Format
Working Paper
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The Use and Abuse of Blight in Eminent Domain

Authors
Martin Gold and Lynne Sagalyn
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Fordham Urban Law Journal

Blight findings have functioned as a cornerstone for condemnation since the great urban decline of the mid-twentieth century prompted governments at all levels throughout the country to intervene in the real estate market. Elements of blight, and then the term itself, became a basis for this intervention. But the use of blight as a basis for takings has become increasingly controversial as its application has migrated from slum clearance to urban renewal, then to economic development projects, and on to revenue-enhancing projects.

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Accounting for Value

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The European Financial Review

Accounting and valuation are so intertwined that valuation is really a matter of accounting; valuation involves accounting for value. Accordingly, a valuation is only as good as the accounting underlying it. How can one ask the question of what the price-earnings should be if the earnings are fuzzy? What is the meaning of price-to-book if book values are suspect? There is a question for both the investor and the accountant to answer: What is good accounting for valuation? Do International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) or U.S.

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