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Asset Returns, Discount Rate Changes, and Market Efficiency

Journal of Finance 1985 40(4), 1141-1158 open access
ABSTRACT The primary purpose of this paper is to reconcile the previous findings of discount rate endogeneity with the presence of discount rate announcement effects in securities markets. The crux of this reconciliation is the distinction between “technical” discount rate changes that are endogenous and “nontechnical” changes which contain some informative policy implications. In essence, we attempt to separate expected discount rate changes from unexpected changes, or equivalently, the expected component of discount rate changes from the unexpected component. If markets are efficient, the former should have no announcement effects while the latter may be associated with an announcement effect. Accordingly, the focus of the empirical analysis is on the interaction between discount rate exogeneity, the specific monetary policy regime, and accouncement effects. In addition, we examine whether the behavior of these markets in the postannouncement period is consistent with the rapid price adjustment implied by market efficiency.

Dividend Policy under Asymmetric Information

Journal of Finance 1985 open access
ABSTRACT We extend the standard finance model of the firm's dividend/investment/financing decisions by allowing the firm's managers to know more than outside investors about the true state of the firm's current earnings. The extension endogenizes the dividend (and financing) announcement effects amply documented in recent research. But once trading of shares is admitted to the model along with asymmetric information, the familiar Fisherian criterion for optimal investment becomes time inconsistent: the market's belief that the firm is following the Fisher rule creates incentives to violate the rule. We show that an informationally consistent signalling equilibrium exists under asymmetric information and the trading of shares that restores the time consistency of investment policy, but leads in general to lower levels of investment than the optimum achievable under full information and/or no trading. Contractual provisions that change the information asymmetry or the possibility of profiting from it could eliminate both the time inconsistency and the inefficiency in investment policies, but these contractual provisions too are likely to involve dead-weight costs. Establishing which route or combination of routes serves in practice to maintain consistency remains for future research.

Does the Stock Market Overreact?

Journal of Finance 1985 40(3), 793 open access
Research in experimental psychology suggests that, in violation of Bayes' rule, most people tend to “overreact” to unexpected and dramatic news events. This study of market efficiency investigates whether such behavior affects stock prices. The empirical evidence, based on CRSP monthly return data, is consistent with the overreaction hypothesis. Substantial weak form market inefficiencies are discovered. The results also shed new light on the January returns earned by prior “winners” and “losers.” Portfolios of losers experience exceptionally large January returns as late as five years after portfolio formation.

Performance measurement of early warning models

Journal of Banking & Finance 1985 9(2), 267-273 open access
The paper presents a new measure to evaluate models which predict severe bank weakness or failure. The conventional measure has been the ‘percentage classified correctly (CC)’. This measure can be quite high even though a low percentage of weak or failed bank is classified correctly. We resolve this problem by weighting CC by two additional factors: (1) banks that actually weakened or failed as a percentage of those that fail a model's ‘hurdle test’, and (2) the percentage of all weak or failed banks correctly classified. The paper then compares the performance of several recently published early warning models using the new measure.

JFQ volume 20 issue 2 Cover and Front matter

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1985 20(2), f1-f5 open access
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JFQ volume 20 issue 1 Cover and Front matter

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1985 20(1), f1-f4 open access
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JFQ volume 20 issue 1 Cover and Back matter

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1985 20(1), b1-b3 open access
Value maximization as a decision criterion is integrated throughout this new text, especially in the working capital section. Also included is a complete chapter on analysis of project risk. Examples apply finance concepts to the real-life concerns of financial managers in every chapter. Accompanied by a microcomputer, floppy-disk workbook with challenging problem sets.

JFQ volume 20 issue 3 Cover and Back matter

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1985 20(3), b1-b6 open access
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