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Additional Evidence on the Relation Between Divestiture Announcements and Shareholder Wealth

Journal of Finance 1984 39(5), 1437-1448
ABSTRACT This paper presents estimates of the effect of voluntary divestiture announcements on shareholder wealth. The results show that both spin‐off and sell‐off announcements tend to have a positive influence on the stock prices of the divesting firms, and that the spin‐offs “outperform” the sell‐offs on the day of the event. We also find that the economic gains to the shareholders of the selling and acquiring firms are nearly identical, suggesting that the sell‐off decision is perceived by both investor groups as a positive net present value (NPV) transaction.

A Critical Reexamination of the Empirical Evidence on the Arbitrage Pricing Theory

Journal of Finance 1984 39(2), 323-346
ABSTRACT This paper demonstrates that the Roll and Ross (RR) and other previously published tests of the APT are subject to several basic limitations. There is a general nonequivalence of factor analyzing small groups of securities and factor analyzing a group of securities sufficiently large for the APT model to hold. It is found that as one increases the number of securities, the number of “factors” determined increases. This increase in the number of “factors” with larger groups of securities cannot readily be explained by a distinction between “priced” and “nonpriced” risk factors as it is impermissible to carry out tests on whether a given “risk factor is priced” using factor analytic procedures.

Expectations, Surprises and Treasury Bill Rates: 1960–82

Journal of Finance 1984 39(3), 685-696 open access
ABSTRACT Changes in six‐month bill rates over semiannual periods in the 1960s and 1970s are successfully related to expected changes and to surprises. The latter include unanticipated changes in expected inflation, in the growth of industrial production and base money, and in inflation uncertainty. Estimation of the basic equation through the middle of 1983 does not suggest any change in structure. Moreover the equation “explains” 60 percent of the extraordinarily high level of real rates since late 1980, largely owing to an excess of unexpected net increases in anticipated inflation over actual increases. Our estimates provide some support for the expectations theory; there appears to be information content in six–month forward rates. While this content is swamped by the impact of surprises in equations explaining rate changes in terms of forward rates alone, the content is clear when proxies for the surprises are included in the equations.

How Big is the Tax Advantage to Debt?

Journal of Finance 1984 39(3), 841-853 open access
ABSTRACT This paper uses an option valuation model of the firm to answer the question, “What magnitude tax advantage to debt is consistent with the range of observed corporate debt ratios?” We incorporate into the model differential personal tax rates on capital gains and ordinary income. We conclude that variations in the magnitude of bankruptcy costs across firms can not by itself account for the simultaneous existence of levered and unlevered firms. When it is possible for the value of the underlying assets to jump discretely to zero, differences across firms in the probability of this jump can account for the simultaneous existence of levered and unlevered firms. Moreover, if the tax advantage to debt is small, the annual rate of return advantage offered by optimal leverage may be so small as to make the firm indifferent about debt policy over a wide range of debt‐to‐firm value ratios.

Bank Management; Text and Cases.

Journal of Finance 1984 39(5), 1628
PART ONE: Introduction to Bank Management: The Changing Nature of Bank Management Understanding a Bank's Financial Statements A Model for Measuring Returns and Risks in Banking Evaluation of a Bank's Performance PART TWO: Basic Asset, Liability and Capital Decisions: Measuring and Providing Reserves and Liquidity Managing the Security Portfolio Trends in Acquisition and Cost of Bank Funds Capital Planning, Adequacy and Generation Capital Acquisition and Management PART THREE: Managing the Loan Portfolio: The Bank Credit Organization Lending Principles and the Business Borrower Commercial Lending Consumer Lending Special Markets for Bank Loans Part Four: Integrative Bank Financial Decisions: Interest Margin Sensitivity and Management Advanced Alternatives for Measuring and Managing Interest Rate Risk Innovations in Products and Pricing Bank Mergers and Acquisitions International Banking Long Range Planning for Future Performance.

The Leasing Puzzle

Journal of Finance 1984 39(4), 1055-1065
ABSTRACT Prevailing theories in finance and economics suggest that leases and debt are substitutes; an increase in one should led to a compensating decrease in the other. In particular, there are three views on the magnitude of the substitution coefficient. Standard finance theory treats cash flows from lease obligations as equivalent to debt cash flows, thus describing the tradeoff between debt and leases as one‐to‐one. Others are willing to use a tradeoff of leases for debt which is less than, but close to, one. The rationale for a dollar of leases using less of debt capacity than a dollar of debt obligation is based upon the differences in the terms and nature of lease and debt contracts. Finally, there are some who argue that since leased assets may be firm‐specific, the risk of moral hazard may be great, resulting in a tradeoff of greater than one‐to‐one; that is, a dollar of a lease obligation uses more of debt capacity than a dollar of a debt obligation. A series of empirical tests are performed in this study on samples of approximately 600 firms, covering the years 1976 through 1981, with none of the three views supported by the results. Instead, the results indicate that leases and debt are complements; greater use of debt is associated with a greater use of leasing. This finding reappears consistently for each year, each definition of leverage ratios, and each approach to analysis. This complementary relationship persists even after refinements are made to the estimation technique.

Mean‐Gini, Portfolio Theory, and the Pricing of Risky Assets

Journal of Finance 1984 39(5), 1449-1468 open access
ABSTRACT This paper presents the mean‐Gini (MG) approach to analyze risky prospects and construct optimum portfolios. The proposed method has the simplicity of a mean‐variance model and the main features of stochastic dominance efficiency. Since mean‐Gini is consistent with investor behavior under uncertainty for a wide class of probability distributions, Gini's mean difference is shown to be more adequate than the variance for evaluating the variability of a prospect. The MG approach is then applied to capital markets and the security valuation theorem is derived as a general relationship between average return and risk. This is further extended to include a degree of risk aversion that can be estimated from capital market data. The analysis is concluded with the concentration ratio to allow for the classification of different securities with respect to their relative riskiness.