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The Cities Service Takeover: A Case Study: Discussion

Journal of Finance 1983 38(2), 345
Robert S. Harris, The Cities Service Takeover: A Case Study: Discussion, The Journal of Finance, Vol. 38, No. 2, Papers and Proceedings Forty-First Annual Meeting American Finance Association New York, N.Y. December 28-30, 1982 (May, 1983), pp. 345-347

Valuation of asset leasing contracts

Journal of Financial Economics 1983 12(2), 237-261
This paper describes the relation among a variety of asset leasing contracts, including: (1) cancellable operating leases; (2) leases which grant the lesse an option to extend the life of the lease; (3) leases that grant the lessee an option to purchase the leased asset at a fixed price at the maturity date of the lease; (4) leases that grant the lessee the right to purchase the leased asset at its ‘fair market value’ at the maturity date of the lease; (5) leases that grant an option to the lessee to purchase the leased asset at a prespecified price anytime during the life of the lease; (6) leases that require the lessee to purchase the leased asset at a fixed price at the maturity date of the lease; and (7) leases that contain non-cancellation provisions. The paper uses a compound option pricing framework to develop a general model for valuing (or evaluating) each of the types of leasing contracts. Numerical examples are presented to illustrate the effect of the various elements of a leasing contract — including cancellation risk and residual value risk — on equilibrium rental payments.

Dynamic Factor Demands and the Effects of Energy Price Shocks

American Economic Review 1983
A dynamic model is used to understand how sharp changes in energy prices affect investment behavior, employment, and energy use. The authors discuss the theory behind their model selection, model specifications, estimation methods and data; list parameter estimates and elasticities for the selected model; and describe the simulations. They conclude that (1) the data strongly reject the hypothesis of constant returns to scale within their specification of aggregate production; (2) the data indicate adjustment costs on labor are small, and (3) their results help reconcile some of the conflicting estimates of energy-demand elasticities appearing in recent literature. 23 references, 3 figures, 3 tables.

Public Opinion and the Balanced Budget

American Economic Review 1983
While most Americans have long favored a balanced federal budget , not all do. This paper uses cross-sectional differences among respondents to two public opinion polls to try to discriminate among competing hypotheses about why Americans want the budget balanced. Logit models are fit to data from two different public opinion polls : a Gallup poll and a CBS/New York Times poll conducted , respectively, in March and April of 1980, a time when the proposed balanced budget amendment to the Constitution was very much in the news. In each case , a large majority favored a balanced budget requirement. However, they favor it for a smorgasbord of reasons and at unclear price. It appears that political affiliation, ideology and personal circumstances are far less important determinants of the choice than economic rationales.