Haskayne School of Business
Permanent URI for this community
The Haskayne School of Business was founded at the University of Calgary in 1967, and was named in honour of Richard F. Haskayne, OC, AOE, FCA in 2002.
Haskayne School of BusinessBrowse
Browsing Haskayne School of Business by Department "Centre for Family Business Management & Entrepreneurship Finance"
Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Board Monitoring and Access to Debt Financing(Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2009) Chua, Jess; Wu, ZhenyuBoard monitoring should affect a firm's access to debt financing because it improves firm performance and the board is ultimately responsible for the firm's debt. In this study, we show empirically that access to debt financing indeed benefits in two ways from board monitoring: directly from the monitoring and indirectly from improvement in performance. The methodological challenge is in separating the two effects from each other and from those of other drivers of debt financing.Item Open Access Coalitions, the Me-First Rule, and the Liquidation Decision(Wiley-Blackwell, 1980) Chua, Jess; Ang, James SConventional wisdom in economics recommends that a bankrupt firm with liquidation value greater than going-concern value be liquidated by the creditors and that a firm with going-concern value greater than liquidation value continue to operate. Recently, counterexamples to the traditional rule have been presented. This note argues that violation of the me-first rule is responsible for these counterexamples. Since violation of the me-first rule involves the absence of value-maximization on the part of some economic agents, economic theories concerned with rational behavior may justifiably still assume that the liquidation decision follows the traditional rule.Item Open Access COMPOSITE MEASURES FOR THE EVALUATION OF INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE(Cambridge University Press, 1979) Chua, Jess; Ang, James SThe article addresses composite measures of investment performance. The author identifies some of the challenges posed by previous measures, particularly ex ante measures that are not directly applicable to ex post performance. Other efforts that address predictability are considered. The author considers that systematic biases may be hindering the success of these measures, and this article posits that these biases could be caused by a deficiency of not considering asymmetry of return distributions and an inability to specify the correct holding period. The article presents a literature review, and develops a composite performance measure that takes into account advances in Capital Market theory.Item Open Access The profiles of late-paying consumer loan borrowers: an exploratory study(Ohio State University Press, 1979) Chua, Jess; Ang, James S; Bowling, Clinton H