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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

Dancing with the Activists

Authors
Lucian Bebchuk, Alon Brav, Wei Jiang, and Thomas Keusch
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Working Paper
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On the Origins and Development of Pakistan's Soccer-Ball Cluster

Authors
David Atkin, Azam Chaudhry, Shamyla Chaudry, Amit Khandelwal, Tariq Raza, and Eric Verhoogen
Date
December 1, 2015
Format
Working Paper

Sialkot, Pakistan is the world center of hand-stitched soccer-ball production, home to roughly 130 firms, which produce for all major brands (Atkin et al 2015a, 2015b). At first blush, the existence of this cluster is puzzling. Pakistanis’ sporting passion is cricket; soccer has always been of marginal interest in the country. One might be tempted to dismiss the existence of a cluster where there is no apparent local demand as an anomaly, curious in itself but not indicative of a deeper pattern. But the phenomenon is not uncommon.

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Asset Quality Misrepresentation by Financial Intermediaries: Evidence from the RMBS Market

Authors
Tomasz Piskorski, Amit Seru, and James Witkin
Date
December 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

We document that contractual disclosures by intermediaries during the sale of mortgages contained false information about the borrower's housing equity in 7–14% of loans. The rate of misrepresented loan default was 70% higher than for similar loans. These misrepresentations likely occurred late in the intermediation and exist among securities sold by all reputable intermediaries. Investors — including large institutions — holding securities with misrepresented collateral suffered severe losses due to loan defaults, price declines, and ratings downgrades.

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The New Stock Market: Sense and Nonsense

Authors
Merritt Fox, Lawrence Glosten, and Gabriel Rauterberg
Date
November 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Duke Law Journal

How stocks are traded in the United States has been totally transformed. Gone are the dealers on NASDAQ and the specialists at the NYSE. Instead, a company's stock can now be traded on up to sixty competing venues where a computer matches incoming orders. High-frequency traders (HFTs) post the majority of quotes and are the preponderant source of liquidity in the new market.

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Evidence on Contagion in Earnings Management

Authors
Simi Kedia, Kevin Koh, and Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Working Paper

We examine contagion in earnings management using 2,376 restatements announced during the years 1997-2008. Controlling for industry and firm characteristics, firms are more likely to begin managing earnings after the public announcement of a restatement by another firm in their industry or neighborhood. Such contagion is absent when the restating firm is disciplined by the SEC or class action lawsuits, suggesting deterrent effects of enforcement activity.

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The Real Effects of Hedge Fund Activism: Productivity, Asset Allocation, and Labor Outcomes

Authors
Alon Brav, Wei Jiang, and Hyunseob Kim
Date
October 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

This paper studies the long-term effect of hedge fund activism on the productivity of target firms using plant-level information from the U.S. Census Bureau. A typical target firm improves its production efficiency within three years after the intervention, and this improvement is pronounced in industries with low concentration. By following plants that were sold post-intervention we also find that efficient capital redeployment is an important channel via which activists create value.

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White Paper

Authors
Michael Weinberg
Date
October 1, 2015
Format
Chapter
Book
Investing in Fixed Income, North America

After a multi-decade bond bull market, to what alternative strategies could institutional investors allocate that have a positive expected return, irrespective of interest rates?

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If you were put in charge of all of the pensions in the world tomorrow, what is the first step you would take?

Authors
Michael Weinberg
Date
September 30, 2015
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
AIMA Journal

It is not every day that one is asked a question that is so critical to the sustenance and well-being of such a material percentage of the developed world.  Over the last century, it can be said that western society has evolved to incorporate the notion of a pension as an ideal. Just this past summer it was not inconceivable that Greece would leave the European Union. Why?

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Welfare analysis of dark pools

Authors
Kris Iyer, Ramesh Johari, and Ciamac Moallemi
Date
September 10, 2015
Format
Working Paper

We investigate the welfare implications of operating alternative market structures known as electronic crossing networks or "dark pools" alongside traditional "lit" markets. We study equilibria of a market where intrinsic traders and speculators, endowed with heterogeneous fine-grained information, endogenously choose between dark and lit venues. We establish that while the dark pool attracts relatively uninformed investors, the orders therein experience adverse selection.

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