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Financial Engineering

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Financial Engineering Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Financial Engineering Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Financial Engineering

Corporate Renewal and Turnaround of Troubled Businesses: The Private Equity Advantage

Authors
Kathryn Harrigan and Brian M. Wing
Date
July 14, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Strategic Management Review

Turning around distressed operations is an alternative response to underperformance — as contrasted with using transactions such as divestitures or resource redeployment to deal with troublesome assets during corporate renewal. Taking the perspective of private-equity owners whose interests are primarily financial, we explain how their approach to turnarounds of troubled companies may differ from that of managers within publicly traded firms who may envision the realization of longer-term sources of operating synergy among their firms' lines of business.

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Token-based Platform Finance

Authors
Lin Cong, Ye Li, and Neng Wang
Date
June 3, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We develop a dynamic model of platform economy where tokens serve as a means of payments among platform users and are issued to finance investment in platform productivity. Tokens are optimally issued to reward platform owners when the productivity-normalized token supply is low and burnt to boost the franchise value when the productivity-normalized normalized supply is high.

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Public Company Auditing Around the Securities Exchange Act

Authors
Thomas Bourveau, Matthias Breuer, Jeroen Koenraadt, and Robert Stoumbos
Date
June 1, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We explore the landscape of public company auditing around the introduction of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 1934. Using a broad sample of historical annual reports spanning several decades, we document that most public companies obtained audits even before the SEC’s audit mandate, which limited the mandate’s impact on audit rates. We further document that these companies selected their auditors based on characteristics reflecting independence and competence, even before the SEC’s mandate.

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A Macroeconomic Model with Financially Constrained Producers and Intermediaries

Authors
Vadim Elenev, Tim Landvoigt, and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
Date
May 13, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Econometrica

How much capital should financial intermediaries hold? We propose a general equilibrium model with a financial sector that makes risky long-term loans to firms, funded by deposits from savers. Government guarantees create a role for bank capital regulation. The model captures the sharp and persistent drop in macro-economic aggregates and credit provision as well as the sharp change in credit spreads observed during the Great Recession.

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The Importance of Investor Heterogeneity: An Examination of the Corporate Bond Market

Authors
Jane (Jian) Li and Haiyue Yu
Date
May 10, 2021
Format
Working Paper

Corporate bond market participants are increasingly worried about liquidity. However, bid-ask spreads and other standard measures indicate liquidity has not deteriorated significantly. This paper proposes a potential reconciliation. We show the sensitivity of credit yields to bid-ask spreads increased fourfold from 2005 to 2019. We then provide a model that connects this change to the rapid growth of mutual funds in the corporate bond market. The model features heterogeneous investors with different trading needs who choose between a risk-free asset and illiquid bonds.

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Redrawing the Map of Global Capital Flows: The Role of Cross-Border Financing and Tax Havens

Authors
Antonop Coppola, Matteo Maggiori, Brent Neiman, and Jesse Schreger
Date
May 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Quarterly Journal of Economics

Global firms finance themselves through foreign subsidiaries, often shell companies in tax havens, which obscures their true economic location in official statistics. We associate the universe of traded securities issued by firms in tax havens with their issuer’s ultimate parent and restate bilateral investment positions to better reflect the financial linkages connecting countries around the world. Bilateral portfolio investment from developed countries to firms in large emerging markets is dramatically larger than previously thought.

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Learning about competitors: Evidence from SME lending

Authors
Olivier Darmouni and Andrew Sutherland
Date
May 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article

We study how small and medium enterprise (SME) lenders react to information about their competitors’ contracting decisions. To isolate this learning from lenders’ common reactions to unobserved shocks to fundamentals, we exploit the staggered entry of lenders into an information-sharing platform. Upon entering, lenders adjust their contract terms toward what others offer. This reaction is mediated by the distribution of market shares: lenders with higher shares or that operate in concentrated markets react less.

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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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Taking Orders and Taking Notes: Dealer Information Sharing in Treasury Auctions

Authors
Nina Boyarchenko, David Lucca, and Laura Veldkamp
Date
February 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Political Economy

The use of order flow information by financial firms has come to the forefront of the regulatory debate. A central question is: Should a dealer who acquires information by taking client orders be allowed to use or share that information? We explore how information sharing affects dealers, clients and issuer revenues in U.S. Treasury auctions. Because one cannot observe alternative information regimes, we build a model, calibrate it to auction results data, and use it to quantify counter-factuals. The model's key force is that sharing information reduces uncertainty about future value.

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