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Financial Institutions

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

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Financial Institution Articles

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Latest Financial Institution Research

The Accrual Anomaly: International Evidence

Authors
Morton Pincus, Shivaram Rajgopal, and Mohan Venkatachalam
Date
January 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Accounting Review

We consider stock markets in 20 countries to investigate whether the accrual anomaly (Sloan 1996), characterized by U.S. stock prices overweighting the role of accrual persistence, is a local manifestation of a global phenomenon. We explore whether the occurrence of the anomaly is related to country differences in accounting and institutional structures, and examine alternative explanations for its occurrence. We find stock prices overweight accruals in general, with accruals overweighting occurring in countries with a common law relative to a code law tradition.

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Value Destruction and Financial Reporting Decisions

Authors
John Graham, Campbell Harvey, and Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
November 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Financial Analysts Journal

The comprehensive survey reported here allowed analysis of how senior U.S. financial executives make decisions related to performance measurement and voluntary disclosure. Chief financial officers were asked what earnings benchmarks they cared about and which factors motivated executives to exercise discretion — even sacrifice economic value — to deliver earnings. These issues are crucially linked to stock market performance. The results show that the destruction of shareholder value through legal means is pervasive, perhaps even a routine way of doing business.

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Monetary Policies for Developing Countries: The Role of Institutional Quality

Authors
Haizhou Huang and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
September 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Economics

Weak public institutions, including high levels of corruption, characterize many developing countries. We demonstrate that this feature has important implications for the design of monetary policymaking institutions. We find that a pegged exchange rate or dollarization, while sometimes prescribed as a solution to the credibility problem, is typically not appropriate for countries with poor institutions. Such an arrangement is inferior to a Rogoff-style conservative central banker, whose optimal degree of conservatism is proportional to the quality of institutions.

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Issue Costs in the Eurobond Market: The Effects of Market Integration

Authors
Doron Nissim and Arie Melnik
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Banking and Finance

The 1993 Japanese financial system reform allowed banks to enter the underwriting market for corporate bonds through bank-owned security subsidiaries. This paper examines empirically whether underwriting commissions and yield spreads on corporate straight bonds issued domestically fell as a result of this bank entry. The empirical results show that bank entry significantly lowers both underwriting commissions and yield spreads. Commissions charged by banks are significantly lower than those charged by investment houses.

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The Persistence of the Accruals Anomaly

Authors
Baruch Lev and Doron Nissim
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Contemporary Accounting Research

The accruals anomaly—the negative relationship between accounting accruals and subsequent stock returns—has been well documented in the academic and practitioner literatures for almost a decade. To the extent that this anomaly represents market inefficiency, one would expect sophisticated investors to learn about it and arbitrage the anomaly away. Yet, we show that the accruals anomaly still persists and its magnitude has not declined over time.

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Measuring Marginal Risk Contributions in Credit Portfolios

Authors
Paul Glasserman
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Computational Finance

We consider the problem of decomposing the credit risk in a portfolio into a sum of risk contributions associated with individual obligors or transactions. For some standard measures of risk — including value-at-risk and expected shortfall — the total risk can be usefully decomposed into a sum of marginal risk contributions from individual obligors. Each marginal risk contribution is the conditional expected loss from that obligor, conditional on a large loss for the full portfolio. We develop methods for calculating or approximating these conditional expectations.

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