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Fundamental Investment Analysis

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Fundamental Investment Analysis Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Fundamental Investment Analysis Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Fundamental Investment Analysis

Connecting Book Rate of Return to Risk and Return: The Information Conveyed by Conservative Accounting

Authors
Stephen Penman and Xiao-Jun Zhang
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

This paper investigates how book rate of return under GAAP relates to risk and the required return for investing. A standard view sees the book rate of return as a measure of profitability to be compared to the required return to evaluate the success of an investment. A contrasting view sees the book rate of return as indicative of the required return, consistent with the standard risk-return tradeoff. There clearly is some sorting out to do.

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Investment Dynamics and Earnings-Return Properties: A Structural Approach

Authors
Matthias Breuer and David Windisch
Date
June 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

We propose the standard neoclassical model of investment under uncertainty with short-run adjustment frictions as a benchmark for earnings-return patterns absent accounting influences. We show that our proposed benchmark generates a wide range of earnings-return patterns documented in prior accounting research. Notably, our model generates a concave earnings-return relation, similar to that of Basu [1997], and predicts that the earnings-return concavity increases in the volatility of firms' underlying shock processes and decreases in investment levels.

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An Economist’s Perspective on the Bitcoin Payment System

Authors
Gur Huberman, Jacob Leshno, and Ciamac Moallemi
Date
May 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
AEA Papers and Proceedings

The paper's introduction offers a high-level review of Bitcoin's features, especially its governance by protocol. The paper proceeds to summarize Bitcoin's analysis as a payment system. It pays particular attention to a comparison between Bitcoin and a firm-run payment system.

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Forget perfect life partners. What we need is supportive employers

Authors
Ellen Carr
Date
March 7, 2019
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times

Corporate support has not kept pace with realities of family life.

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Monetary Policy and Exchange Rate Returns: Time-Varying Risk Regimes

Authors
Charles Calomiris and Harry Mamaysky
Date
February 24, 2019
Format
Working Paper

We develop an empirical model of exchange rate returns, applied separately to samples of developed (DM) and developing (EM) economies’ currencies against the dollar. Monetary policy stance of the global central banks, measured via a natural-language-based approach, has a large effect on exchange rate returns over the ensuing year, is closely linked to the VIX, and becomes increasingly important in the post-crisis era.

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Advice from one female portfolio manager to others

Authors
Ellen Carr
Date
January 14, 2019
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times

The psycho-cultural barriers women face are hard to overcome because they are not obvious.

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A Matter of Principle: Accounting Reports Convey both Cash-flow News and Discount-rate News

Authors
Stephen Penman and Nir Yehuda
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

This paper modifies the standard returns-earnings regression in accounting research to show that financial reports convey both cash-flow news and discount-rate (expected-return) news. The paper points to the realization principle, associated as it is with the resolution of risk, as the accounting feature that conveys expected-return news. The modified returns-earnings regressions indicate that the information so conveyed pertains to priced risk.

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A Matter of Principle: Accounting Reports Convey Both Cash-Flow News and Discount-Rate News

Authors
Stephen Penman and Nir Yehuda
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

This appendix provides a contrast to the variance decomposition approach for identifying the two types of news in accounting data. This approach, explained in Callen (2009), assumes the Vuolteenaho (2002) model, implemented in a vector autoregressive (VAR) scheme to capture the linear dependencies among multiple time series of indicator variables.

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Fintech, Regulatory Arbitrage, and the Rise of Shadow Banks

Authors
Greg Buchak, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski, and Amit Seru
Date
December 1, 2018
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Shadow bank market share in residential mortgage origination nearly doubled from 2007 to 2015, with particularly dramatic growth among online "fintech" lenders. We study how two forces, regulatory differences and technological advantages, contributed to this growth.

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