John Syllabus
John Syllabus
There will be 3 extra classes, time and venue to be finalized in the first class.
Objectives: The main objective of the course is to provide students a strong background in the
mainstream areas of modern corporate finance and related areas of banking at an advanced level.
Providing the students an opportunity to develop modeling skills for doing research in corporate
finance/banking is another important purpose of the course. Another objective is to train the students
to recognize and use recurring model structures to read and understand corporate finance.
Importantly, training to do good corporate finance is recognizing the interesting/important problems
and embedding them in the “right” institutional structure. In addition to discussing the theoretical
papers, we will refer to a large number of empirical papers as relevant.
For topics, see Reading List attached.
Pre-requisites: All participants should have taken an advanced course in microeconomics. This is a
second year doctoral class.
Administrative Matters:
1. Since the objective of the course is to read and understand the major articles in corporate
financial theory, participants are expected to spend adequate time preparing the assigned
readings before coming to class, and working through assigned problems sets. In the first
part, there will be three Problem Sets assigned.
2. The grade in the course will be based on an in-class final examination, problem sets and class
participation.
Although several books containing material in corporate finance are listed below the primary course
material will be journal articles. The books and the relevant material from them will be discussed in
class. Many of the articles on the reading list will be handed out in class. Many of the others can be
downloaded from JSTOR and other websites.
Recommended Texts:
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For most of the material we shall rely on research papers (published or Working Papers) that will be
handed out. The following books will be useful for certain material and will be referred to in class.
Several chapters of the Tirole book will be recommended. For a very nice set of recent surveys of
empirical work in many mainstream areas of corporate finance, I also recommend the two volumes
of the Eckbo book.
1. Jean Tirole, The Theory of Corporate Finance, Princeton University Press, January 2006.
3. Freixas, X. and J-C. Rochet, Microeconomics of Banking, The MIT Press, Second Edition
2008.
5. Laffont and Martimort, The Theory of Incentives: The Principal-Agent Model, Princeton
University Press, 2002.
6. Copeland, Shastry and Weston, Financial Theory and Corporate Policy, 4th. Edition,
Pearson Addison-Wesley, 2005.
8. Salanie, B., The Economics of Contracts, The MIT Press, Second Printing, 1998.
10. Hart, O., Firms, Contracts, and Financial Structure, Oxford University Press, 1995.
11. Lease, John, Kalay, Lowenstein and Sarig, Dividend Policy: Its Impact on Firm Value,
Harvard Business School Press, 2000.
12. Masulis, R.W. The Debt-Equity Choice, Ballinger Publishing Company, 1988.
13. Weston, Chung and Siu, Takeovers, Restructuring and Corporate Governance, Prentice-
Hall, Englewood-Cliffs, N.J., 1998. (Also see, Weston, Chung and Hoag, Mergers,
Restructuring and Corporate Control, Prentice-Hall, Englewood-Cliffs, N.J., 1994).
14. Megginson, W.L., Corporate Finance Theory, Addison-Wesley, New York, 1997.
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Reading List:
In Part 1 of the course, the following topics will be covered: M&M theorems on capital
structure in complete/perfect capital markets, tax equilibriums, principal agent models (background),
agency models in corporate finance, asymmetric information and models of signaling and reputation.
We will also introduce issues of corporate governance and security design. The relevant empirical
research in each area would also be discussed.
The following reading list will be organized around the topics of perfect markets, taxes
(corporate/personal), agency theory and contracting, corporate governance, incomplete information
games/signaling, design of securities and institutions, and models of reputation. In each area some
background material, some of the relevant empirical papers and recent surveys (when available) are
also listed. The articles marked with an asterisk (*) will be discussed in detail in class.
*1. E. Fama and M. Miller, The Theory of Finance. Dryden Press, 1972, Ch.4.
*2. F. Modigliani and M. Miller, "The Cost of Capital, Corporation Finance and The
Theory of Investment," American Economic Review, June 1958, 261-297.
*4. Miller, M.H., "The Modigliani Miller Propositions After Thirty Years," Journal of
Economic Perspectives, Vol 2, No 4, Fall 1988, p. 99-120.
*5. Stiglitz, J.E., "Why Financial Structure Matters," Journal of Economic Perspectives,
Vol 2, No 4, Fall 1988, p. 121-126.
*1. F. Modigliani and M. Miller, "Corporate Income Taxes and the Cost of Capital: A
Correction," American Economic Review, June 1963, 433-443.
*2. Miller, M.H.,"Debt and Taxes" Journal of Finance, May 1977, 261-275.
*4. DeAngelo, and R. Masulis (1980). "Optimal Capital Structure under Corporate and
Personal Taxation," Journal of Financial Economics 8, 3-30.
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5. Miller, M. and M. Scholes, "Dividends and Taxes," Journal of Financial Economics,
December 1978, 333-364.
E1. Elton, E.J., and M.J. Gruber, "Marginal Stockholders' Tax Rates and the
Clientele Effect," Review of Economics and Statistics, February 1970,
68-74.
E3. Litzenberger, R., and K. Ramaswamy, "The Effect of Personal Taxes and
Dividends on Capital Asset Prices: Theory and Empirical Evidence,"
Journal of Financial Economics, June 1979, 163-196.
*1. Ross, S.A., "The Economic Theory of Agency: The Principal's Problem," American
Economic Review, LXII, May 1973, 134-139.
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*8 Smith and Warner, "On Financial Contracting: An Analysis of Bond Covenants,"
Journal of Financial Economics, June 1979, 117-161.
*9 John and Kalay, "Costly Contracting and Optimal Payout Constraints," Journal of
Finance, May 1982, 457-470.
*10. Green, Richard C. (1984). "Investment Incentives, Debt and Warrants," Journal of
Financial Economics 13, 115-136.
*11. T. A. John and K. John, "Top Management Compensation and Capital Structure",
Journal of Finance, July 1993.
12. Elazar Berkovitch and Ronen Israel, "The Design of Internal Control and Capital
Structure," The Review of Financial Studies, Spring 1996, 209-240.
13. Hadiye Aslan and Praveen Kumar, “Strtegic Ownership Structure and the Cost of
Debt”, The Review of Financial Studies, July 2012, 2257-2300.
*14. Acharya, John and Sundaram, “On the Optimality of Resetting Executive Stock
Options, Journal of Financial Economics, July 2000, 65-101.( Download from
Kose John’s website).
15. Park, C.,” Monitoring and Structure of Debt Contracts,” Journal of Finance, Oct
2000, 2157-2195.
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Background: Laffont and Mortimort, Chapters 1 to 4.
Survey: Lambrecht and Myers, Agency Dynamics in Corporate Finance, Annual Reviews
in Financial Economics, Vol 8, 2016, 53-80
Survey: R. B. Adams, B. E. Hermalin and M.S. Weisbach, “The Role of Boards in Corporate
Governance: A Conceptual Framework and Survey,” Journal of Economic Literature,
2010, Vol 48, No 1, 58-107.
Survey: Harris and Raviv, "The Theory of Capital Structure," The Journal of Finance, March
1991, 297-353.
Survey: F. Allen and A. Winton, "Corporate Financial Structure, Incentives and Optimal
Contracting," In Handbooks in Operations Research and Management Science,
Volume 9: Finance, eds. R.A. Jarrow, V. Maksimovic, and W.T. Ziemba, North
Holland, New York.
Survey: Kose John and Lemma W. Senbet, "Corporate Governance and Board Effectiveness,"
Journal of Banking and Finance, 22 (1998), 371-403.
Survey: Andrei Shleifer and Robert W. Vishny, "A Survey of Corporate Governance,"
Journal of Finance, June 1997, 737-783.
Survey: P. Bolton, M. Becht and A. Roell, “Corporate Governance and Control”, the
Handbook of the Economics of Finance, edited by George Constantinides, Milton
Harris and René Stulz, North-Holland, 2003.
E1. Rafael La Porta, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes, Andrei Shleifer, and Robert W. Vishny,
"Legal Determinants of External Finance," Journal of Finance, July 1997, 1131-1150.
E2. Comment, R., and G.A. Jarrell, 1995, "Corporate Focus and Stock Returns," Journal
of Financial Economics 37, 67-87.
E3. John, K., and E. Ofek, 1995, "Asset Sales and Increase in Focus," Journal of
Financial Economics 37, 105-126.
E4. Lang, H.P., and R.E. Stulz, 1994, "Tobin's Q, Corporate Diversification and Firm
Performance," Journal of Political Economics 102,1248-1280
E5. Berger, Philip G. and Eli Ofek, "Diversification's Effect on Firm Value," Journal of
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Financial Economics, (1995) vol. 37, 39-65.
E6. Denis, David J. Diane K. Denis and Atulya Sarin, "Agency Problems, Equity
Ownership, and Corporate Diversification," Journal of Finance, March 1997, 52,
135-160.
E7. Sheridan Titman and Roberto Wessels, 1988, "The Determinants of Capital Structure
Choice," Journal of Finance, 43,1-19.
E8. Raghuram G. Rajan and Luigi Zingales, "What Do We Know About Capital
Structure? Some Evidence From International Data," Journal of Finance, December
1995, 1421-1460.
E9. Berger and Ofek, “Causes and Effects of Corporate Refocusing,” The Review of
Financial Studies, Summer 1999, 311-346.
E10. Harvey, C. and J. Graham, “The Theory and Practice of Corporate Finance: Evidence
from the Field," with John Graham, Journal of Financial Economics 2001, 60, 187-
243
E11. Kose John, Lubomir Litov and Bernard Yeung “Corporate Governance and
Corporate Risk Taking,” Journal of Finance, 2008.
E12. K. John, A. Knyazeva and D. Knyazeva “Does geography matter? Firm location
and corporate payout policy,” (Joint with Anzhela Knyazeva and Diana
Knyazeva), Journal of Financial Economics, 2011.
*1. Spence, M., "Job Market Signaling," Quraterly Journal of Economics, August
1973,355-379.
*3. Ross, S.A., "The Determination of Financial Structure: The Incentive Signaling
Approach," Bell Journal of Economics, Spring 1977, 23-40.
*5. Myers, Stewart C. and Nicholas S. Majluf (1984). "Corporate Financing and
Investment Decisions When Firms Have Information That Investors Do Not Have,"
Journal of Financial Economics 13, 187-221.
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*7. Miller, M. and K. Rock, "Dividend Policy Under Asymmetric Information," Journal
of Finance, September 1985.
*8. Brennan, Michael and Alan Kraus (1987). "Efficient Financing Under
Asymmetric Information," Journal of Finance 42, 1225-1243.
*9. Ambarish, John and Williams, "Efficient Signaling with Dividends and Investment,"
Journal of Finance, June 1987, 321-343.
Survey: Riley, J. G. “Silver Signals: Twenty-Five Years of Screening and Signaling,” Journal
of Economic Literature, Vol 39, June 2001, 432-478.
Survey: Smith, C., Jr. "Investment Banking and the Capital Acquisition
Process," Journal of Financial Economics, January-February 1986, 3-30.
E1. Pyung Sig Yoon and Laura T. Starks, "Signaling Investment Opportunities, and
Dividend Announcements," The Review of Financial Studies, Winter 1995,
995-1018.
E4. Asquith, P., and D. Mullins, Jr., "The Impact of Initiating Dividend
Payments on Shareholders' Wealth," Journal of Business, January 1983,
77-96.
E5. Vermaelen T., "Common Stock Repurchases and Market Signa ling: An
Empirical Study," Journal of Financial Economics, June 1981, 139-183.
*1. John and Nachman, "Risky Debt, Investment Incentives and Reputation
in a Sequential Equilibrium," Journal of Finance, July 1985.
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VI. Corporate Finance and Asset Pricing
2. K. John, K.J.Martijn Cremers and Vinay Nair, “Takeovers and The Cross-Section
of Returns” Review of Financial Studies, 2009, Vol. 22, 4, 1409-1445.
2. Gale, D. and M. Hellwig, "Incentive Compatible Debt Contracts: The One Period
Problem," Review of Economic Studies, 52, 647-663, 1985.
5. Fluck, Z., 1997, "Optimal Financial Contracting: Debt versus Outside Equity,"
Review of Financial Studies, Summer 1998, 383-418.
7. Repullo, R., and J. Suarez, “Monitoring, Liquidation, and Security Design,” The
Review of Financial Studies, Spring 1998, 163-188.
Survey: Harris and Raviv, "Optimal Security Design: A Survey," Northwestern University
Working Paper, 1990.
Jeffrey Wurgler, Malcolm Baker and Richard S. Ruback, “Behavioral Corporate Finance: A
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Survey,” in Eckbo, B.E. (Ed.), Handbook of Corporate Finance: Empirical Corporate
Finance, Volumes 1. In: Handbooks in Finance Series. Elsevier/North-Holland, Amsterdam,
2008.
Betton, Eckbo and Thorburn, “Corporate Takeovers”, in Eckbo, B.E. (Ed.), Handbook of
Corporate Finance: Empirical Corporate Finance, Volumes 1 and 2. In: Handbooks in
Finance Series. Elsevier/North-Holland, Amsterdam, 2008.
Hotchkiss, John, Mooradian and Thorburn, “Bankruptcy and the Resolution of Financial
Distress”, in Eckbo, B.E. (Ed.), Handbook of Corporate Finance: Empirical Corporate
Finance, Volumes 1 and 2. In: Handbooks in Finance Series. Elsevier/North-Holland,
Amsterdam, 2008.
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