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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

Activity-Based Valuation of Bank Holding Companies

Authors
Charles Calomiris and Doron Nissim
Date
February 1, 2007
Format
Working Paper

Standard valuation methods do not lend themselves to bank holding companies. Banks create value through the types of assets and liabilities they create (e.g., lending and deposit taking relationships). Bank income streams reflect heterogeneous sources of income which differ in their margins of profitability and persistence.

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Defined Contribution Pension Plans: Determinants of Participation and Contribution Rates

Authors
Gur Huberman, Sheena Iyengar, and Wei Jiang
Date
January 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Services Research

Records of 793,794 employees eligible to participate in 647 defined contribution pension plans are studied. About 71% of them choose to participate in the plans, and of the participants, 12% choose to contribute the maximum allowed, $10,500.

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Accounting for Employee Stock Options and Other Contingent Equity Claims: Taking a Shareholder's View

Authors
James Ohlson and Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Applied Corporate Finance

In this paper, we propose a method of accounting for stock options that tracks the effect of the options on shareholder value. The accounting approach we outline can be applied not only to employee stock options but to all claims that are effectively convertible into common shares, including convertible preferred stock, warrants, and call and put options on the firm's own stock. Our proposal also aims to make accounting consistent with stock prices, since the market surely takes account of the (potential) valuation effects of these claims when setting stock prices.

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Optimal Liquidity Provision for Decision Makers

Authors
Robert Hahn and Paul Tetlock
Date
January 1, 2007
Format
Working Paper

Although prices in financial markets play an important role in improving allocative efficiency in the real economy, few models of securities markets explicitly incorporate resource allocation decisions. In this paper, we study the equilibrium in a securities market when the market price provides valuable information that can improve allocative efficiency. We show that a decision maker will subsidize liquidity in an illiquid securities market to gather valuable information about her decision payoffs.

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The Accrual Anomaly: International Evidence

Authors
Morton Pincus, Shivaram Rajgopal, and Mohan Venkatachalam
Date
January 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Accounting Review

We consider stock markets in 20 countries to investigate whether the accrual anomaly (Sloan 1996), characterized by U.S. stock prices overweighting the role of accrual persistence, is a local manifestation of a global phenomenon. We explore whether the occurrence of the anomaly is related to country differences in accounting and institutional structures, and examine alternative explanations for its occurrence. We find stock prices overweight accruals in general, with accruals overweighting occurring in countries with a common law relative to a code law tradition.

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Value Destruction and Financial Reporting Decisions

Authors
John Graham, Campbell Harvey, and Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
November 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Financial Analysts Journal

The comprehensive survey reported here allowed analysis of how senior U.S. financial executives make decisions related to performance measurement and voluntary disclosure. Chief financial officers were asked what earnings benchmarks they cared about and which factors motivated executives to exercise discretion — even sacrifice economic value — to deliver earnings. These issues are crucially linked to stock market performance. The results show that the destruction of shareholder value through legal means is pervasive, perhaps even a routine way of doing business.

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Valuing and Hedging Defined Benefit Pension Obligations: The Role of Stocks Revisited

Authors
Deborah Lucas and Stephen Zeldes
Date
September 1, 2006
Format
Working Paper

This paper revists two basic questions that are critical for understanding and controlling DB pension risk: How should the value of DB pension liabilities be computed; and how should pension assets be allocated? In particular, we reexamine the role of stocks in valuing and hedging pension obligations. Our approach differs from others in the literature in at least two ways. First, it is one of the few that focuses on market value, and does so by using a derivative approach.

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Discussion of 'Divisional Performance Measurement and Transfer Pricing for Intangible Assets'

Authors
Tim Baldenius
Date
May 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

The conference paper by Johnson (2006, Review of Accounting Studies, forthcoming) develops an incomplete-contracting transfer pricing model with a number of novel features: taxation, sequential investments, and intangible assets being transferred. This discussion aims to disentangle these features so as to highlight those that are the key drivers of the results. Moreover, I show that some of the results can be generalized to settings involving a greater level of technological interdependency between the divisions.

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Learning Asymmetries in Real Business Cycles

Authors
Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh and Laura Veldkamp
Date
May 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

When a boom ends, the downturn is generally sharp and short. When growth resumes, the boom is more gradual. Our explanation rests on learning about productivity. When agents believe productivity is high, they work, invest, and produce more. More production generates higher precision information. When the boom ends, precise estimates of the slowdown prompt decisive reactions: Investment and labor fall sharply. When growth resumes, low production yields noisy estimates of recovery. Noise impedes learning, slows recovery, and makes booms more gradual than downturns.

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