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A time series/cross section analysis of the determinants of Australian trading bank loan/deposit interest margins: 1962–1981
Explanations for the Instability of Equity Beta: Risk-Free Rate Changes and Leverage Effects
Douglas V. DeJong, Daniel W. Collins, Explanations for the Instability of Equity Beta: Risk-Free Rate Changes and Leverage Effects, The Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Vol. 20, No. 1 (Mar., 1985), pp. 73-94
The Determinants of Firms' Hedging Policies
We develop a positive theory of the hedging behavior of value-maximizing corporations. We treat hedging by corporations simply as one part of the firm's financing decisions. We examine (1) taxes, (2) contracting costs, and (3) the impact of hedging policy on the firm's investment decisions as explanations of the observed wide diversity of hedging practices among large, widely-held corporations. Our theory provides answers to the questions: (1) why some firms hedge and others do not; (2) why firms hedge some risks but not others; and (3) why some firms hedge their accounting risk exposure while others hedge their economic value.
Daily Cash Forecasting and Seasonal Resolution: Alternative Models and Techniques for Using the Distribution Approach
Tom W. Miller, Bernell K. Stone, Daily Cash Forecasting and Seasonal Resolution: Alternative Models and Techniques for Using the Distribution Approach, The Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Vol. 20, No. 3 (Sep., 1985), pp. 335-351
Expected Inflation and Interest Rates in a Multi-Asset Model: A Note
This paper analyzes the effect of expected inflation on nominal interest rates, in a theoretical model with money and two different bond types. The inclusion of three assets instead of the usual two causes the effect of expected inflation on the interest rates to deviate from unity. Depending on the sizes of the wealth and interest rate effects on the various asset demands, the effect of expected inflation could even be negative. Several special cases are also considered, and the implications for the interpretation of empirical results are discussed.
Adjustment Costs and Capital Asset Pricing
Discrete-time models of asset pricing have hitherto generally avoided studying the relationship between the underlying technology inherent in the economy and the determinants of the price of capital. A fully articulated economy is constructed in which there is a nontrivial technology for producing capital. The existence of adjustment costs in augmenting the quantity of capital has interesting implications for the stochastic properties of asset prices, as well as other macroeconomic variables. Examples of such economies are used to illustrate this point.
Expected Inflation and Interest Rates in a Multi‐asset Model: A Note
ABSTRACT This paper analyzes the effect of expected inflation on nominal interest rates, in a theoretical model with money and two different bond types. The inclusion of three assets instead of the usual two causes the effect of expected inflation on the interest rates to deviate from unity. Depending on the sizes of the wealth and interest rate effects on the various asset demands, the effect of expected inflation could even be negative. Several special cases are also considered, and the implications for the interpretation of empirical results are discussed.
Adjustment Costs and Capital Asset Pricing
ABSTRACT Discrete‐time models of asset pricing have hitherto generally avoided studying the relationship between the underlying technology inherent in the economy and the determinants of the price of capital. A fully articulated economy is constructed in which there is a nontrivial technology for producing capital. The existence of adjustment costs in augmenting the quantity of capital has interesting implications for the stochastic properties of asset prices, as well as other macroeconomic variables. Examples of such economies are used to illustrate this point.