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Strategy

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

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Latest on Strategy

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Strategy Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Strategy

Strategic Conduct in Credit Derivative Markets

Authors
Patrick Bolton
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Journal of Industrial Organization

This paper reviews recent research at the intersection of industrial organization and corporate finance on credit default swap (CDS) markets. These markets have been at the center of the financial crisis of 2007-2009 and many aspects of their operation are not well understood. The paper covers topics such as counterparty risk in CDS markets, the "empty creditor problem," "naked" CDS positions, the super-senior status of credit (and other) derivatives in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and strategic behavior in CDS settlement auctions.

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Broadband Networks, Smart Grids and Climate Change

Authors
Eli Noam, Lorenzo Pupillo, and Johann Kranz
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Book
Publisher
Springer

In smart grids the formerly separated worlds of energy and telecommunication converge to an interactive and automated energy supply system. Driven by social, legal, and economic pressures, energy systems around the globe are updated with information and communication technology. These investments aim at enhancing energy efficiency, securing affordable energy supply, and mitigate climate change.

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Liability-Driven Investment with Downside Risk

Authors
Bingxu Chen and M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Portfolio Management

We develop a liability driven investment framework that incorporates downside risk penalties for not meeting liabilities. The shortfall between the asset and liabilities can be valued as an option which swaps the value of the endogenously determined optimal portfolio for the value of the liabilities. The optimal portfolio selection exhibits endogenous risk aversion and as the funding ratio deviates from the fully funded case in both directions, effective risk aversion decreases.

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What Is a Company's Most Important Core Competency?

Authors
Yuhuang Zheng and Noel Capon
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Tsinghua Business Review
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Pre-Disclosure Accumulations by Activist Investors: Evidence and Policy

Authors
Lucian Bebchuk, Alon Brav, Robert Jackson, Jr., and Wei Jiang
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Journal of Corporation Law

The SEC is currently considering a rulemaking petition requesting that the Commission shorten the ten-day window, established by Section 13(d) of the Williams Act, within which investors must publicly disclose purchases of a 5% or greater stake in public companies. In this Article, we provide the first systematic empirical evidence on these disclosures and find that several of the petition's factual premises are not consistent with the evidence.

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Volatility around the clock: Bayesian modeling and forecasting of intraday volatility in the financial crisis

Authors
Michael Johannes and Jonathan Stroud
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Working Paper
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Malleable Conjoint Partworths: How the Breadth of Response Scales Alters Price Sensitivity

Authors
Amitav Chakravarti, Andrew Grenville, Vicki Morwitz, Jane Tang, and Gulden Ulkumen
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

In one laboratory study and one field study conducted with a large, representative sample of respondents, we show that seemingly innocuous questions that precede a conjoint task, such as demographic and usage-related screening questions can alter the price sensitivities recovered from the main conjoint task. The findings demonstrate that whether these prior questions use broad response categories (i.e., few scale points) or narrow response categories (i.e., many scale points) systematically influences consumers' price sensitivity in a CBC (Choice Based Conjoint) study.

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Making Mobile Ads That Work

Authors
Stephen Bart and Miklos Sarvary
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Harvard Business Review
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Delinquency model predictive power among low-documentation loans

Authors
Wei Jiang, Ashlyn Aiko Nelson, and Edward Vytlacil
Date
January 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Economics Letters

Using data from a major mortgage bank, we examine the predictive power of mortgage delinquency models as an aggregate measure of the quality of information recorded at loan origination. We measure model predictive power using an out-of-sample prediction criterion and compare predictive power of delinquency models over time and across loans of different documentation levels and origination channels.

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