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THE IMPACT ON OPTION PRICING OF SPECIFICATION ERROR IN THE UNDERLYING STOCK PRICE RETURNS
The Impact on Option Pricing of Specification Error in the Underlying Stock Price Returns
Mergers, Antitrust Law Enforcement and Stockholder Returns
Is There a Capital Shortage: Theory and Recent Empirical Evidence
Leonall C. Andersen, Is There a Capital Shortage: Theory and Recent Empirical Evidence, The Journal of Finance, Vol. 31, No. 2, Papers and Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the American Finance Association Dallas, Texas December 28-30, 1975 (May, 1976), pp. 257-268
Exchange Rate Changes, Inflation, and the Value of the Multinational Corporation
Recognizing the Impact of Growth: Discussion
Financial Models of Regulated Firms: Discussion
EXCHANGE RATE CHANGES, INFLATION, AND THE VALUE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
INTERACTIONS OF CORPORATE FINANCING AND INVESTMENT DECISIONS—IMPLICATIONS FOR CAPITAL BUDGETING
Everyone seems to agree that there are significant interactions between corporate financing and investment decisions. The most important argument to the contrary — embodied in Modigliani and Miller's (MM's) famous Proposition I — specifically assumes the absence of corporate income taxes; but their argument implies an interaction when such taxes are recognized. Interactions may also stem from transaction costs or other market imperfections. The purpose of this paper is to present a general approach for analysis of the interactions of corporate financing and investment de-cisions, and to derive some of the approach's implications. Perhaps the most interesting implication is that the weighted average cost of capital formulas proposed by MM and other authors are not always correct. Except in certain special cases, a more general "Adjusted Present Value " rule should, in principle, be used to evaluate investment opportunities. The paper is organized as follows. Section II presents the