Higher-beta and higher-volatility equities do not earn commensurately higher returns, a pattern known as the risk anomaly. In this paper, we consider the possibility that the risk anomaly represents mispricing and develop its implications for corporate leverage. The risk anomaly generates a simple tradeoff theory: At zero leverage, the overall cost of capital falls as leverage increases equity risk, but as debt becomes riskier the marginal benefit of increasing equity risk declines. We show that there is an interior optimum and that it is reached at lower leverage for firms with high asset risk. Theoretically and empirically, the risk anomaly tradeoff theory distinguishes itself from the standard tradeoff theory with bankruptcy costs by pre...
The paper presents a simple model arguing that the pecking order theory is an extreme when there is ...
Traditional capital structure theory in frictionless and efficient markets predicts that reducing ba...
This dissertation consists of two essays and five chapters. The first essay in chapter two addresses...
Higher-beta and higher-volatility equities do not earn commensurately higher returns, a pattern know...
Modern portfolio theory states that investments with greater beta, a common measure of risk, require...
All else equal, the use of leverage increases investment risk. But, can it ever have the opposite ef...
High risk stocks tend to produce lower risk-adjusted returns than their lower risk counterparts. I t...
What is the cross-sectional relationship between financial leverage and expected equity returns? How...
peer-reviewedWhen trading incurs proportional costs, leverage can scale an asset's return only up to...
This paper shows that illiquid growth opportunities crucially impact the agency costs of risky debt....
Prior research has established that high operating leverage leads to high systematic risk. We examin...
The standard measures of distress risk ignore the fact that firm defaults are correlated and that so...
Over the last three decades, the capital asset pricing model has occupied a central and often contro...
Low-risk investing refers to a diverse collection of investment strategies that emphasize low-beta,...
The most common explanation for the superior returns of undervalued stocks is that market extrapola...
The paper presents a simple model arguing that the pecking order theory is an extreme when there is ...
Traditional capital structure theory in frictionless and efficient markets predicts that reducing ba...
This dissertation consists of two essays and five chapters. The first essay in chapter two addresses...
Higher-beta and higher-volatility equities do not earn commensurately higher returns, a pattern know...
Modern portfolio theory states that investments with greater beta, a common measure of risk, require...
All else equal, the use of leverage increases investment risk. But, can it ever have the opposite ef...
High risk stocks tend to produce lower risk-adjusted returns than their lower risk counterparts. I t...
What is the cross-sectional relationship between financial leverage and expected equity returns? How...
peer-reviewedWhen trading incurs proportional costs, leverage can scale an asset's return only up to...
This paper shows that illiquid growth opportunities crucially impact the agency costs of risky debt....
Prior research has established that high operating leverage leads to high systematic risk. We examin...
The standard measures of distress risk ignore the fact that firm defaults are correlated and that so...
Over the last three decades, the capital asset pricing model has occupied a central and often contro...
Low-risk investing refers to a diverse collection of investment strategies that emphasize low-beta,...
The most common explanation for the superior returns of undervalued stocks is that market extrapola...
The paper presents a simple model arguing that the pecking order theory is an extreme when there is ...
Traditional capital structure theory in frictionless and efficient markets predicts that reducing ba...
This dissertation consists of two essays and five chapters. The first essay in chapter two addresses...