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Portfolio Income: A Test of a Formula Plan

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(3), 90
One of the difficulties of evaluating formula plans by testing them in the light of past experience is the fact that there is no index of bond experience which simulates typical portfolio performance. Bond indices are stated in terms of yields with constant maturities, but the capital values of bonds vary according to their maturities given the same yield. Cottle and Whitman used elaborate techniques to make their bond portion of the total portfolio realistic, but were only partially successful. This writer also attempted to eliminate the problem of simulating the bond portfolio in a previous paper by assuming that the defensive portion of the portfolio was invested in a Savings and Loan account receiving the national average return. This procedure thus ignored the problem of bond maturities and variation in capital values due to changes in interest rates.

Implications of Balance of Payments Deficits for Bank Liquidity

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(1), 56
Today great emphasis is being placed upon the need to maintain adequate supplies of money in the economy in the face of continuing balance of payments deficits. This emphasis reflects a desire to assure a. continuous high level of economic activity and low unemployment rates.

JFQ volume 1 issue 3 Cover and Front matter

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(3), f1-f5 open access
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JFQ volume 1 issue 4 Cover and Front matter

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(4), f1-f5 open access
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A Conditional Theory of Banking Enterprise

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(2), 84
Applied economics consists of the application of the general principles of economics to a particular situation in order to provide an explanation of the behavior of economic agents in that situation. However, the degree of specificity of any explanation depends upon the particular uses to which the explanation is to be put. Thus, in applied economics one may wish to explain the behavior of the agents who operate a particular enterprise. Or, one may wish to provide a. broader frame of reference to explain the behavior of agents who operate a. type or class of enterprises. By utilizing the analysis of the general economic theory of the firm one may introduce the additional constraints under which, for example, a public utility operates, and thereby derive a. theory of public utilities. Or, in the same way, one may wish to construct a, theory of transport firms, or a theory of retail firms, or a theory of manufacturing firms.

Optimal Design of a Stochastic System with Dominating Fixed Costs

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(3), 55
Executives in a wide variety of formal organizations frequently face decisions involving changes in capacity of service capabilities. Usually these changes mean increases in manpower and/or capital expenditures for new facilities, but due to seasonality, or a decline in business, a decision may also involve the determination of whether to reduce the available capacity. These decisions generally are made by comparing the cost (or savings, which is a negative cost) of changing the service capability with the corresponding costs or risks of not being able to properly meet service requirements. In this paper, the problem described is one in which services are provided, and the cost, or risk, of not being able to meet service requirements is expressed by means of a queuing equation.

The Control of Savings and Loan Associations

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1966 1(4), 58
The control of profit-making corporations long has been the subject of investigation and discussion, and in recent years same of this interest has shifted to the control of corporations by financial institution. Very little attention has been paid to the control of mutually-owned fiduciaries. This article reports a preliminary investigation of the control of associations in the savings and loan industry.