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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Conflicts of Interest in the Structure of REITs

Authors
Lynne Sagalyn
Date
June 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Real Estate Finance

When the surge of equity REIT initial public offerings (IPOs) came to market in 1993 and 1994, the quality as well as an obvious increase in the quantity of newly securitized real estate (approximately $15.1 billion in the first two years of this bull market), defined a new REIT marketplace. By the end of 1995, the implied market capitalization of equity REITs had reached $59 billion, fourfold its size in 1992, and these real estate companies controlled approximately $83 billion in real estate.

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The stochastic economic lot scheduling problem: Cyclical base-stock policies with idle times

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Ziv Katalan
Date
June 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

In this paper we discuss stochastic Economic Lot Scheduling Problems (ELSP), i.e., settings where several items need to be produced in a common facility with limited capacity, under significant uncertainty regarding demands, production times, setup times, or combinations thereof. We propose a class of production/inventory strategies for stochastic ELSPs and describe how a strategy which minimizes holding, backlogging, and setup costs within this class can be effectively determined and evaluated.

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Cue Representation and Selection Effects of Arousal in Persuasion

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham
Date
March 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

A popular prediction in persuasion research is that decreased ability to process information increases reliance on peripheral cues and decreases reliance on central claims. This paper explains why this prediction does not necessarily hold when processing capacity is impaired by high arousal. Three experiments suggest that two types of processes underlie arousal effects on persuasion. Arousal induces selective processing of cues that are diagnostic at the expense of cues that are nondiagnostic - the selection effect.

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Pricing a Bundle of Products and Services: The Case of Nonprofits

Authors
Asim Ansari, S. Siddarth, and Charles Weinberg
Date
February 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The optimal number of items to be included in a service bundle for a profit-maximizing firm that uses pure components, pure bundling, or mixed bundling strategies is determined. When applied to Venkatesh and Mahajan's (1993) data, the number of events held is shown to have a substantial impact on firm profits. The pricing strategies of a nonprofit organization that seeks to maximize usage subject to a nondeficit constraint is also studied. Using the same data, it is shown that, compared to a profit maximizing firm, a usage-maximizing nonprofit organization 1. charges lower prices, 2.

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Design and Valuation of Debt Contracts

Authors
Ronald Anderson and M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

This articles studies the design and valuation of debt contracts in a general dynamic setting under uncertainty. We incorporate some insights of the recent corporate finance literature into a valuation framework. The basic framework is an extensive form game determined by the terms of a debt contract and applicable bankruptcy laws. Debtholders and equityholders behave noncooperatively. The firm's reorganization boundary is determined endogenously. Strategic debt service results in significantly higher default premia at even small liquidation costs.

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International Adjustment Under the Classical Gold Standard: Evidence for the U.S. and Britain, 1879-1914

Authors
Charles Calomiris and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Chapter
Book
Modern Perspectives on the Gold Standard
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An Individual Level Analysis of the Mutual Fund Investment Decision

Authors
Noel Capon, Michael Fitzsimmons, and Russ Prince
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Services Research

This study investigates the manner in which consumers make investment decisions for mutual funds. Investors report that they consider many nonperformance-related variables. When investors are grouped by similarity of investment decision process, a single small group appears to be highly knowledgeable about its investments. However, most investors appear to be naive, having little knowledge of the investment strategies or financial details of their investments. Implications for mutual fund companies are discussed.

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Heuristiques et Biais Decisionnels en Marketing

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Recherche et Applications en Marketing

Classical economic theory mainly examines decision making from a normative perspective. Social and cognitive psychology's view of decision making is more descriptive. This article presents a structured synthesis of a third stream of research, which intersects economics and psyhology, and is known as Behavioral Decision Theory. This stream of research shows that decision makers often deviate from prescritive norms. This article explains why such deviations occur and what they imply for marketing.

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Detection of minimal forecast horizons in dynamic programs with multiple indicators of the future

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Michal Tzur
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Naval Research Logistics

Many sequential planning problems can be represented as a shortest path problem in an acyclic network. This includes all deterministic dynamic programs as well as certain stochastic sequential decision problems. In this article, we identify a large class of shortest path problems for which a general efficient algorithm for the simultaneous solution and detection of minimal forecast horizons is developed.

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