Balance Sheet: Volume 10 Issue 2

Subject:

Table of contents

Quantitative value management: the way ahead

Joseph Mariathasan

Investment markets are becoming less rather than more efficient. The author argues that this is because qualitative analysis depends on individuals who are not objective but rely…

6686

The role and importance of outsourced independent research

Roger Bootle

In recent years investment research has been produced by banks and investment houses which have conflicting interests between clients as investors and clients as investment…

3890

Goodbye to book value investing

Chuck Joyce, Jack Gray

The authors argue that book value accounting is now completely out of date. Citing examples based on the Campbell’s Soup company and AOL Time Warner they show how investors who…

1572

The dynamically projected balance sheet: implications for earnings, value and funds transfer pricing

Robert Fiedler, Karl Brown, James Moloney

Advanced software and hardware solutions are enabling institutions to progress from traditional asset liability management to earnings sensitivity and future market valuation…

5408

Balancing the odds: stochastic accounting

Michael Mainelli, Ian Harris

The use of a deterministic numeric paradigm in auditing and accounting may well be the root cause of many current problems. This paper argues that risk‐based accounting methods…

9783

Operational risk: the banks and the regulators struggle

John Thirlwell

Understanding first credit risk and the operational risk has taxed the banking industry. The author suggests that the evidence points to a lack of understanding within the banks…

4587

The hedging imperative: making the choices

Abby Kyte

The world of financial instruments is becoming increasingly regulated. This paper deals with how hedging works as a method of changing an organisation’s risk profile. It argues…

4386

ISSN:

0965-7967

Online date, start – end:

2000 – 2004

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Merged to become:

Journal of Risk Finance