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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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Latest on Corporate Finance

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Corporate Finance Faculty

Latest Corporate Finance Research

Are Dividend Taxes and Imputation Credits Capitalized in Share Values?

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard and Trevor Harris
Date
March 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

We examine the hypothesis that dividend taxes are capitalized into share prices by focusing on investors? implicit valuations of retained earnings versus paid-in equity. Retained earnings are distributable as taxable dividends, whereas paid-in equity is distributable as a tax-free return of capital. Consistent with dividend tax capitalization, firm-level results for the United States indicate that accumulated retained earnings are valued less per unit than contributed capital. In addition, differences in dividend tax rates across U.S.

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The Share Price Effects of Dividend Taxes and Tax Imputation Credits

Authors
Trevor Harris and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
March 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

We examine the hypothesis that dividend taxes are capitalized into share prices by focusing on investors' implicit valuations of retained earnings versus paid-in equity. Retained earnings are distributable as taxable dividends, whereas paid-in equity is distributable as a tax-free return of capital. Consistent with dividend tax capitalization, firm-level results for the United States indicate that accumulated retained earnings are valued less per unit than contributed capital. In addition, differences in dividend tax rates across U.S.

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Intermediate Finance

Authors
John Donaldson and Jean-Pierre Danthine
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Book
Publisher
Prentice Hall
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Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond

Authors
Bruce Greenwald, Paul Sonkin, Michael Van Biema, and Judd Kahn
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Book
Publisher
Wiley

From the publisher: From the "guru to Wall Street's gurus" comes the fundamental techniques of value investing and their applications. Bruce Greenwald is one of the leading authorities on value investing. Some of the savviest people on Wall Street have taken his Columbia Business School course on the subject. Now this dynamic and popular teacher, with some colleagues, reveals the fundamental principles of value investing, the one investment technique that has proven itself consistently over time.

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Familiarity Breeds Investment

Authors
Gur Huberman
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

Shareholders of a Regional Bell Operating Company (RBOC) tend to live in the area which it serves, and an RBOC's customers tend to hold its shares rather than other RBOCs' equity. The geographic bias of the RBOC investors is closely related to the general tendency of households' portfolios to be concentrated, of employees' tendency to own their employers' stocks in their retirement accounts, and to the home country bias in the international arena.

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Systematic Liquidity

Authors
Gur Huberman and Dominika Halka
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Research

Most of the market microstructure literature focuses on the liquidity of individual securities, whereas much of the asset pricing literature examines the association between systematic risk and return. We document the presence of a systematic, time-varying component of liquidity. At the moment, neither the inventory nor the asymmetric information-based approach to liquidity explains the systematic, time-varying component of liquidity.

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Stock and Bond Pricing in an Affine Economy

Authors
Geert Bekaert and Steven Grenadier
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Working Paper

This article provides a stochastic valuation framework for bond and stock returns that builds on three di¤erent pricing traditions: a¢ne models of the term structure, present-value pricing of equities, and consumptionbased asset pricing. Our model provides a more general application of the a¢ne framework in that both bonds and equities are priced in a consistent fashion. This pricing consistency implies that term structure variables help price stocks while stock price fundamentals help price the term structure.

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Shortfall risk in long-term hedging with short-term futures contracts

Authors
Paul Glasserman
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Chapter
Book
Option Pricing, Interest Rates and Risk Management

The purpose of this chapter is to propose and illustrate a simple measure of the risk of a cash shortfall arising from the funding requirements of a futures hedge. We give particular attention to the probability of a large shortfall anytime up to a specified horizon as opposed to merely at that horizon.

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Continuous-Time Methods in Finance: A Review and an Assessment

Authors
M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
August 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

I survey and assess the development of continuous-time methods in finance during the last 30 years. The subperiod 1969 to 1980 saw a dizzying pace of development with seminal ideas in derivatives securities pricing, term structure theory, asset pricing, and optimal consumption and portfolio choices. During the period 1981 to 1999 the theory has been extended and modified to better explain empirical regularities in various subfields of finance.

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