Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(2), b1-b1open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(4), f1-f7open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(3), b1-b2open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(1), b1-b1open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(1), f1-f5open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(3), f1-f5open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(2), f1-f6open access
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Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(3), 265open access
A firm which produces a single product, whose production cost is a linear function of the production level and where net price per unit is constant, has a Pre-Tax Earnings function which is a linear function of the production level (see Figure I).
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis19672(4), 365open access
The substantial growth of the mutual fund industry during the last few years has attracted the attention of students of finance, economics, and public policy alike. Net assets managed by such funds have grown from approximately $450 million in 1940 to more than $38 billion by June of 1966. During 1965 the mutual fund industry funneled some $5. billion of new (primarily equity) funds into the capital markets; more than twice the $2. billion in new equity raised by all non-financial United States corporations during the year. Growth of the industry has not been uniform, however, but has been concentrated among a relatively small number of highly successful funds.