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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

CIP Deviations, the Dollar, and Frictions in International Capital Markets

Authors
Wenxin Du and Jesse Schreger
Date
May 1, 2021
Format
Working Paper

The covered interest rate parity (CIP) condition is a fundamental arbitrage relationship in international finance. In this chapter, we review its breakdown during the Global Financial Crisis and its continued failure in the subsequent decade. We review how to measure CIP deviations, discuss the drivers of CIP deviations, and the implications of CIP deviations for global financial markets.

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The Benchmark Inclusion Subsidy

Authors
Anil Kashyap, Natalia Kovrijnykh, Jane (Jian) Li, and Anna Pavlova
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Journal of Financial Economics

We study the effects of evaluating asset managers against a benchmark on corporate decisions, e.g., investments, M&A, and IPOs. We introduce asset managers into an otherwise standard model and show that firms inside the benchmark are effectively subsidized by the asset managers. This “benchmark inclusion subsidy” arises because asset managers have incentives to hold some of the equity of firms in the benchmark regardless of their risk characteristics. Due to the benchmark inclusion subsidy, a firm inside the benchmark values an investment project more than the one outside.

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Dynamic Information Regimes in Financial Markets

Authors
Paul Glasserman, Harry Mamaysky, and Yiwen Shen
Date
April 28, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We develop a model of investor information choices and asset prices where the availability of information about fundamentals is time-varying. A competitive research sector produces more information when more investors are willing to pay for that research. This feedback, from investor willingness to pay for information to more information production, generates two regimes in equilibrium, one having high prices and low volatility, the other the opposite. The low-price, high-volatility regime is associated with greater information asymmetry between informed and uninformed investors.

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Credit Supply, Firms, and Earnings Inequality

Authors
Christian Moser, Farzad Saidi, Benjamin Wirth, and Stefanie Wolter
Date
April 16, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We study the distributional consequences of monetary policy-induced credit supply in the labor market. To this end, we construct a novel dataset that links worker employment histories to firm financials and banking relationships in Germany. Firms in relationships with banks that are more exposed to the introduction of negative interest rates in 2014 experience a relative contraction in credit supply, associated with lower average wages and employment. These effects are heterogeneous within and between firms.

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Financial Fragility with SAMs?

Authors
Daniel Greenwald, Tim Landvoigt, and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
Date
April 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

Shared Appreciation Mortgages (SAMs) feature mortgage payments that adjust with house prices. These mortgage contracts are designed to stave off home owner default by providing payment relief in the wake of a large house price shock. SAMs have been hailed as an innovative solution that could prevent the next foreclosure crisis, act as a work-out tool during a crisis, and alleviate fiscal pressure during a downturn. They have inspired Fintech companies to offer home equity contracts. However, the home owner's gains are the mortgage lender's losses.

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Underwriting Government Debt Auctions: Auction Choice and Information Production

Authors
Sudip Gupta, Rangarajan Sundaram, and M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
April 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

In this paper, we examine a novel two-stage mechanism for selling government securities, wherein the dealers underwrite in the first stage the sale of securities, which are auctioned in stage 2 via either a discriminatory auction (DA) or a uniform price auction (UPA).

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How Does Financial-Reporting Regulation Affect Industry-Wide Resource Allocation?

Authors
Matthias Breuer
Date
March 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

This paper examines the impact of mandatory reporting and auditing of firms' financial statements on industry-wide resource allocation. Using threshold-induced variation in the share of mandated firms in a given industry, I document that reporting mandates facilitate ownership dispersion in capital markets and spur competition in product markets. I, however, do not find that reporting mandates unambiguously improve the efficiency of industry-wide resource allocation. With respect to auditing mandates, I find only that they impose a fixed cost on firms, deterring smaller entrants.

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Earnings Inequality and Dynamics in the Presence of Informality: The Case of Brazil

Authors
Niklas Engbom, Gustavo Gonzaga, Christian Moser, and Roberta Olivieri
Date
February 24, 2021
Format
Working Paper

Using rich administrative and household survey data, we document a series of new facts on earnings inequality and dynamics in a developing country with a large informal sector: Brazil. Since the mid-1990s, both inequality and volatility of earnings have declined significantly in Brazil's formal sector. Higher-order moments of the distribution of earnings innovations show cyclical movements in Brazil that are similar to those in developed countries like the US. Earnings mobility is comparatively high, especially at the bottom of the distribution.

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Jane Austen plot unfolds in the high-yield debt market

Authors
Ellen Carr
Date
February 3, 2021
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times

Shotgun marriage between credit investors and companies to be tested amid recovery from pandemic.

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