Latest on Fundamental Investment Analysis
Fundamental Investment Analysis Faculty
CBS Faculty Research on Fundamental Investment Analysis
The Design of Financial Statements
Collateral Values by Asset Class: Evidence from Primary Securities Dealers
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2010
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- The Review of Financial Studies
Using data on repurchase agreements by primary securities dealers, we show that three classes of securities (Treasury securities, securities issued by government-sponsored agencies, and mortgage-backed securities) can be formally ranked in terms of their collateral values in the general collateral (GC) market.
The Political Lessons of Depression-Era Banking Reform
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2010
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Oxford Review of Economic Policy
The banking legislation of the 1930s took very little time to pass, was unusually comprehensive, and unusually responsive to public opinion. Ironically, the primary motivations for the main bank regulatory reforms in the 1930s (Regulation Q, the separation of investment banking from commercial banking, and the creation of federal deposit insurance) were to preserve and enhance two of the most disastrous policies that contributed to the severity and depth of the Great Depression — unit banking and the real bills doctrine.
Executive Compensation and Risk Taking
This paper studies the connection between risk taking and executive compensation in financial institutions.
International Stock Return Comovements
- Authors
- Date
- December 1, 2009
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Finance
We examine international stock return comovements using country-industry and country-style portfolios as the base portfolios. We first establish that parsimonious risk-based factor models capture the data covariance structure better than the popular Heston-Rouwenhorst (1994) model. We then establish the following stylized facts regarding stock return comovements. First, there is no evidence for an upward trend in return correlations, except for the European stock markets. Second, the increasing importance of industry factors relative to country factors was a short-lived phenomenon.
Accounting for Intangible Assets: There Is Also an Income Statement
Accounting is often criticized for omitting intangible assets from the balance sheet. This paper points out that the omission is not necessarily a deficiency. There is also an income statement, and the value of intangible (and other) assets can be ascertained from the income statement. Thus, calls for the recognition of "intangible assets" on the balance sheet may be misconceived. The paper lays out the property whereby the income statement corrects for deficiencies in the balance sheet.
"Accounting for Intangible Assets: There Is Also an Income Statement"
Accounting is often criticized for omitting intangible assets from the balance sheet. With value in firms of today flowing less from tangibles assets and more from so-called intangibles—brands, distribution systems, supply chains, "knowledge capital," "organization capital"—accounting is seen as remiss, with high price-to-book ratios as evidence. The remedy often proposed involves booking these intangible assets to the balance sheet.
Reforming Social Security with Progressive Personal Accounts
- Authors
-
John Geanakoplos and Stephen Zeldes
- Date
- January 1, 2009
- Format
-
Chapter
- Book
- Social Security Policy in a Changing Environment
The heated debate about how to reform Social Security has come to a standstill because the view of most Democrats (that Social Security must be a defined benefits plan similar in spirit to the current system) seems irreconcilable with the proposals supported by many Republicans (to create a defined contribution system of personal accounts holding marketed assets).