Kathryn Judge of Columbia University documents how financial intermediaries persistently impose high fees compared to the value rendered, attributes this to political influence, and suggests countervailing policy strategies, including stoking competition and enhancing disclosure to reduce excessive transaction costs. In this solicited comment, I concur with Judge\u27s findings and prescriptions by adding a paired example: that of Berkshire Hathaway versus Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. In the field of corporate acquisitions, these rivals are opposites, Berkshire shunning intermediaries and generating virtually no transaction costs while KKR feasts on multiple and lavish fees. The contrast reflects broader differences between Berkshire and private...
This article develops an empirical model of firms’ choice of corporate laws under inertia. Delaware ...
Coase, Ronald The work of economist Ronald Coase (1910-) transformed legal scholars\u27 approaches t...
textMy doctoral dissertation is composed of three essays in corporate finance. The first essay exam...
Kathryn Judge of Columbia University documents how financial intermediaries persistently impose high...
Ronald Coase and others writing in his wake typically assume that institutional arrangements evolve ...
As is well known among financial economists but not previously recognized within the antitrust commu...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
The freedom to make contracts is a liberating feature of commercial life, yet too often contracts tu...
In this dissertation, I analyze behavior of two types of financial intermediaries that play critical...
In a recent article, Elliott Weiss and Lawrence J. White sought to establish that seven decisions of...
In this Article, I will argue that the entire exercise of worrying about distributions among investo...
This Article presents a theory of the corporate governance costs of private equity. In doing so, it ...
We consider the case of changing competition that comes from stronger antitrust enforcement around t...
In this article, the author explains Chancellor Allen\u27s expansive reputation by examining his abi...
The author analyzes the role of corporate boards of directors during takeover and control transactio...
This article develops an empirical model of firms’ choice of corporate laws under inertia. Delaware ...
Coase, Ronald The work of economist Ronald Coase (1910-) transformed legal scholars\u27 approaches t...
textMy doctoral dissertation is composed of three essays in corporate finance. The first essay exam...
Kathryn Judge of Columbia University documents how financial intermediaries persistently impose high...
Ronald Coase and others writing in his wake typically assume that institutional arrangements evolve ...
As is well known among financial economists but not previously recognized within the antitrust commu...
From the classic Cary-Winter debate to current legal scholarship, commentators have struggled to exp...
The freedom to make contracts is a liberating feature of commercial life, yet too often contracts tu...
In this dissertation, I analyze behavior of two types of financial intermediaries that play critical...
In a recent article, Elliott Weiss and Lawrence J. White sought to establish that seven decisions of...
In this Article, I will argue that the entire exercise of worrying about distributions among investo...
This Article presents a theory of the corporate governance costs of private equity. In doing so, it ...
We consider the case of changing competition that comes from stronger antitrust enforcement around t...
In this article, the author explains Chancellor Allen\u27s expansive reputation by examining his abi...
The author analyzes the role of corporate boards of directors during takeover and control transactio...
This article develops an empirical model of firms’ choice of corporate laws under inertia. Delaware ...
Coase, Ronald The work of economist Ronald Coase (1910-) transformed legal scholars\u27 approaches t...
textMy doctoral dissertation is composed of three essays in corporate finance. The first essay exam...