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Income Taxes and Entrepreneurs' Use of Labor

Journal of Labor Economics 2000 18(2), 324-351
We investigate the effect of entrepreneurs' personal taxes on their use of labor, analyze the tax returns of sole proprietors before and after the Tax Reform Act of 1986, and determine how the substantial reductions in marginal tax rates affected their hiring decisions and wage bills. Individual income taxes exert a statistically and quantitatively significant influence on the probability of hiring workers. Raising the entrepreneur's “tax price” by 10% raises the mean probability of hiring by about 12%. Further, taxes influence total wage payments to workers. The tax‐price elasticity of the median wage bill is about .37.

Hedging and Liquidity

Review of Financial Studies 2000 13(1), 127-153
This article develops a model for evaluating alternative hedging strategies for financially constrained firms. A key advantage of the model is the ability to capture the intertemporal effects of hedging on the firm's financial situation. We characterize the optimal hedge. A wide range of alternative hedging strategies can be specified and the model allows us to determine in each case if the hedging strategy raises or lowers firm value and by how much. We show that hedging firm value, hedging cash flow from operations and hedging sales revenue are not optimal. The article highlights the fact that every hedging strategy comes packaged with a borrowing strategy which requires careful consideration.

Hedging and Liquidity

Review of Financial Studies 2000 13(1), 127-153
This article develops a model for evaluating alternative hedging strategies for financially constrained firms. A key advantage of the model is the ability to capture the intertemporal effects of hedging on the firm's financial situation. We characterize the optimal hedge. A wide range of alternative hedging strategies can be specified and the model allows us to determine in each case if the hedging strategy raises or lowers firms value and by how much. We show that hedging firm value, hedging cash flow from operations and hedging sales revenue are not optimal. The article highlights the fact that every hedging strategy comes packaged with a borrowing strategy which requires careful consideration.

Bankruptcy auctions: costs, debt recovery, and firm survival

Journal of Financial Economics 2000 58(3), 337-368
This paper provides some first, large-sample evidence on the Swedish auction bankruptcy system. Compared to U.S. Chapter 11 cases, the small-firm bankruptcy auctions examined here are substantially quicker, have lower costs, and avoid deviations from absolute priority. Three-quarters of the firms are auctioned as going concerns, which is similar to Chapter 11 survival rates. Moreover, based on market values, creditors in going-concern auctions recover a similar fraction of face value as creditors of much larger firms in Chapter 11 reorganizations. The evidence presented here suggests that the auction bankruptcy system is a surprisingly efficient restructuring mechanism for small firms.

The Incremental Information Content of SAS No. 59 Going-Concern Opinions

Journal of Accounting Research 2000 38(1), 209
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate whether the expanded requirements of SAS No. 59 (A/CPA [1988]), which requires auditors to actively evaluate and report on a client's going-concern status for the coming year, have allowed investors to make more accurate ex ante assessments of firms that eventually file for bankruptcy. We extend Chen and Church [1996] (hereafter CC), who conclude that SAS No. 34 (AICPA [1981]) "subject to" going-concern opinions have information value because they reduce the surprise associated with bankruptcy announcements. We hypothesize that if SAS No. 59 has achieved what was intended, going-concern opinions issued under SAS No. 59 should further reduce investor surprise at bankruptcy announcements. While we do not believe SAS No. 59 was issued for the specific purpose of helping users to predict bankruptcy, we do suggest that the increased auditor responsibility and improved communication should provide users with information that is of relatively higher quality. This argument is based on a number of important differences between SAS No. 34 and SAS No. 59.

A note on market response to corporate loan announcements in Canada

Journal of Banking & Finance 2000 24(3), 381-393
This note validates the key results of prior studies of bank loan announcement effects using a common data set drawn from the Canadian capital market. Announcements of bank loans are associated with positive abnormal returns significantly higher than for private placements and loan syndications. Announcement effects are most pronounced when monitoring is most intense and when an announcement signals that the bank's private information is favorable. Conclusions of prior studies on bank loan announcements, conducted exclusively on US data, are robust for a different banking system.

Discretionary-accruals models and audit qualifications

Journal of Accounting and Economics 2000 30(3), 421-452
The primary goal of this study is to evaluate the ability of the Cross-sectional Jones Model and the Cross-sectional Modified Jones Model to detect earnings management vis-à-vis their time-series counterparts by examining the association between discretionary accruals and audit qualifications. These two cross-sectional models have not been formally evaluated by prior research, and their use may offer certain advantages to investors and researchers over their time-series counterparts. A sample of 173 distinct firms with qualified audit reports and a matched-pair control sample with clean audit reports are used. Only the two cross-sectional models are consistently able to detect earnings management. One limitation of this study is that its findings merely indicate the superiority of the cross-sectional models vis-à-vis their time-series counterparts in an audit qualification setting, not validate either the former or the latter.

Central-Bank Credibility: Why Do We Care? How Do We Build It?

American Economic Review 2000 90(5), 1421-1431 open access
Central bank credibility plays a pivotal role in much of the modern literature on monetary policy, yet it is difficult to measure or even assess objectively. A survey of central bankers was conducted to determine their attitudes on two important issues: why credibility matters, and how credibility can be built. The central bankers' answers are compared with the responses of NBER-affiliated macro and monetary economists. The two groups agree much more than they disagree. They are particularly united in their evaluations of ways to make a central bank credible -- assigning high ratings to the central bank's track record and low ratings to theoretical ideas like precommitment and incentive-compatible contracts.

Crisis and Risk Management

American Economic Review 2000 90(2), 17-21
PUR 6403 Crisis and Risk Management focuses on practical applications of theory and research to identify and strategically manage issues and operational risks that can materially affect the continuity of global organizations. Emphasis is placed on preparing managers for ethical and effective risk and crisis communication, as well as the formulation of strategic crisis communication plans. Class information: PUR 6403 §1219 meets 8th-10th periods (3-6 p.m.) on Thursdays in Weimer 3020. Course goals: The goal of PUR 6403 is for students to understand and appreciate how issues impact organizational continuity, how issues and operational risks are strategically managed and crises averted, and the importance of ethical, effective risk and crisis communication.

Are There Economies of Scale in Underwriting Fees? Evidence of Rising External Financing Costs

Review of Financial Studies 2000 13(1), 191-218
Journal Article Are There Economies of Scale in Underwriting Fees? Evidence of Rising External Financing Costs Get access Oya Altınkılıç, Oya Altınkılıç Virginia Tech Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Robert S. Hansen Robert S. Hansen Virginia Tech Address correspondence to Robert S. Hansen, Department of Finance, Pamplin College of Business, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, or e-mail: [email protected]. Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Financial Studies, Volume 13, Issue 1, January 2000, Pages 191–218, https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/13.1.191 Published: 15 June 2015