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The Pricing of Corporate Debt: A Further Note
Valuation, Capital Structure, and Shareholder Unanimity for Depository Financial Intermediaries
ABSTRACT The theory of corporate finance is not directly applicable to financial intermediary decision‐making. The lack of applicability stems largely from the particular conditions that distinguish intermediary operations from those of the nonfinancial firm. First, when intermediaries accept deposit financing, they must produce services such as liquidity and convenience at considerable expense for real resources. Second, the introduction of intermediation is likely to be accompanied by incomplete markets so that shareholder unanimity is not in general valid. In this paper, a model with incomplete markets is developed and a shareholder approved rule for intermediary capital structure decisions is derived.
Valuation, Capital Structure, and Shareholder Unanimity for Depository Financial Intermediaries
The Prime: Myth and Reality.
Investment Concepts, Analysis and Strategy.
The Market Model and Capital Asset Pricing Theory: A Note
This note shows that a linear market model is sufficient to derive a linear relationship between beta and expected return. Furthermore, the slope of the relationship will be identical with that of the Capital Asset Pricing Model if the return on the market portfolio is normally distributed. However, results from characterization theory suggest that the linear market model assumption is close to that of multivariate normality.
A Generalized Cash Flow Approach to Short-Term Financial Decisions
William L. Sartoris, Ned C. Hill, A Generalized Cash Flow Approach to Short-Term Financial Decisions, The Journal of Finance, Vol. 38, No. 2, Papers and Proceedings Forty-First Annual Meeting American Finance Association New York, N.Y. December 28-30, 1982 (May, 1983), pp. 349-360