We study green bonds, which are bonds whose proceeds are used for environmentally sensitive purposes. After an overview of the U.S. corporate and municipal green bonds markets, we study pricing and ownership patterns using a simple framework that incorporates assets with nonpecuniary utility. As predicted, we find that green municipal bonds are issued at a premium to otherwise similar ordinary bonds. We also confirm that green bonds, particularly small or essentially riskless ones, are more closely held than ordinary bonds. These pricing and ownership effects are strongest for bonds that are externally certified as green.
Malcolm P. Baker
Robert G. Kirby Professor of Business Administration
Robert G. Kirby Professor of Business Administration
We outline a dividend signaling model that features investors who are behaviorally averse to dividend cuts. Managers with strong unobservable cash earnings separate by paying high dividends but retain enough to be likely not to fall short next period. The model is consistent with a Lintner partial adjustment model; modal dividend changes of zero; stronger market reactions to dividend cuts than increases; comparatively infrequent and irregular repurchases; and a mechanism that does not depend on public destruction of value, which managers reject in surveys. New tests involve stronger reactions to changes from longer-maintained dividend levels and reference point currencies of ADR dividends.
Government bonds comove more strongly with bond-like stocks: stocks of large, mature, low-volatility, profitable, dividend-paying firms that are neither high growth nor distressed. Variables derived from the yield curve that are already known to predict returns on bonds also predict returns on bond-like stocks; investor sentiment, a predictor of the cross section of stock returns, also predicts excess bond returns. These relationships remain in place even when bonds and stocks become "decoupled" at the index level. They are driven by a combination of effects including correlations between real cash flows on bonds and bond-like stocks, correlations between their risk-based return premia, and periodic flights to quality.
In this chapter, we survey the theory and evidence of behavioral corporate finance, which generally takes one of two approaches. The market timing and catering approach views managerial financing and investment decisions as rational managerial responses to securities mispricing. The managerial biases approach studies the direct effects of managers' biases and nonstandard preferences on their decisions. We review relevant psychology, economic theory and predictions, empirical challenges, empirical evidence, new directions such as behavioral signaling, and open questions.
Prior stock price peaks of targets affect several aspects of merger and acquisition activity. Offer prices are biased toward recent peak prices although they are economically unremarkable. An offer's probability of acceptance jumps discontinuously when it exceeds a peak price. Conversely, bidder shareholders react more negatively as the offer price is influenced upward toward a peak. Merger waves occur when high returns on the market and likely targets make it easier for bidders to offer a peak price. Parties thus appear to use recent peaks as reference points or anchors to simplify the complex tasks of valuation and negotiation.
Malcolm Baker is the Robert G. Kirby Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School, where he teaches the required course in finance and a short immersive program on investing in life sciences.
His research is in the areas of behavioral finance, corporate finance, and capital markets, with a primary focus on the interactions among corporate finance, investor behavior, and inefficiency in capital markets. His finance cases span numerous industries, with a recent emphasis on life sciences businesses and digital health. Professor Baker has made numerous presentations to academic and practitioner audiences. His research awards include the Brattle Prize, given annually by the American Finance Association to the best corporate finance paper in the Journal of Finance, second place for the Jensen Prize, given annually by the Journal of Financial Economics, the Sharpe Award, given annually by the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, and the Graham and Dodd Scroll, given annually by the Financial Analysts Journal. He has served as associate editor for the Journal of Finance and the Review of Financial Studies.
Baker was Unit Head for finance from 2014 to 2018 and Program Director for corporate finance at the National Bureau of Economic Research from 2011 to 2018. He has been a course head in the MBA required curriculum at Harvard Business School, he has taught in the MBA elective curriculum and several executive education programs, he has developed elective courses in investment strategies, behavioral finance, and investing in life sciences, and he has received the MBA teaching award on two occasions.
Baker received a Ph.D. in business economics from Harvard University, an M.Phil. in finance from Cambridge University, and a bachelor's degree in applied mathematics-economics from Brown University. Before beginning his doctoral studies, he was a senior associate at Charles River Associates and a member of the US Olympic rowing team.
Outside of Harvard, he serves as Director of Research at Acadian Asset Management, an institutional asset management firm focusing in active global and international equity strategies, as a member of the President's Advisory Council on Economics at Brown University, and as a member of the executive committee of Diesel Athletic Club. He was a director at Triton International, the world's largest intermodal container leasing company, and its predecessor TAL, from 2006 through 2023.
- Featured Work
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The market for green municipal bonds is now large enough to study, allowing us to measure a green premium
We study green bonds, which are bonds whose proceeds are used for environmentally sensitive purposes. After an overview of the U.S. corporate and municipal green bonds markets, we study pricing and ownership patterns using a simple framework that incorporates assets with nonpecuniary utility. As predicted, we find that green municipal bonds are issued at a premium to otherwise similar ordinary bonds. We also confirm that green bonds, particularly small or essentially riskless ones, are more closely held than ordinary bonds. These pricing and ownership effects are strongest for bonds that are externally certified as green.
Dividends Per Share Create a Powerful Reference Point in the Eyes of Investors, Creating a Powerful Way for Managers to Signal Their ProspectsWe outline a dividend signaling model that features investors who are behaviorally averse to dividend cuts. Managers with strong unobservable cash earnings separate by paying high dividends but retain enough to be likely not to fall short next period. The model is consistent with a Lintner partial adjustment model; modal dividend changes of zero; stronger market reactions to dividend cuts than increases; comparatively infrequent and irregular repurchases; and a mechanism that does not depend on public destruction of value, which managers reject in surveys. New tests involve stronger reactions to changes from longer-maintained dividend levels and reference point currencies of ADR dividends.
Capital Markets Appear to Misprice Risk, and this Fact can Explain Why Some Firms Rely Heavily on Debt, while Others Avoid ItThe link between measures of risk and return within the equity market has been very weak over the past 47 years: in the United States, returns on high-risk stocks have cumulatively fallen short of the returns on low-risk stocks, during a period when the equity market as a whole experienced high returns relative to Treasury bills. I take seriously the idea that this evidence reflects a risk anomaly—a mispricing of risk for behavioral and institutional reasons—and this allows me to consider the associated implications for investing and corporate finance, examining asset allocation, high leverage in financial firms, low leverage in industrial firms, private equity, venture capital, and bank capital regulation along the way.Do Strict Capital Requirements Raise the Cost of Capital? Historical Stock Returns Say 'Yes, By A Lot.'Minimum capital requirements are a central tool of banking regulation. Setting them balances a number of factors, including any effects on the cost of capital and in turn the rates available to borrowers. Standard theory predicts that, in perfect and efficient capital markets, reducing banks’ leverage reduces the risk and cost of equity but leaves the overall weighted average cost of capital unchanged. We test these two predictions using U.S. data. We confirm that the equity of better-capitalized banks has lower systematic risk (beta) and lower idiosyncratic risk. However, over the last 40 years, lower risk banks have higher stock returns on a risk-adjusted or even a raw basis, consistent with a stock market anomaly previously documented in other samples. The size of the low risk anomaly within banks suggests that the cost of capital effects of capital requirements may be considerable. Assuming competitive lending markets, banks’ low asset betas implied an average risk premium of only 40 basis points above Treasury yields in our sample period; a calibration suggests that a ten percentage-point increase in Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets may have increased this to between 100 and 130 basis points per year. In summary, the low risk anomaly in the stock market produces a potentially significant cost of capital requirements.Benchmarking Institutional Money Managers to an Index Makes Them Avoid Holding Low Risk StocksContrary to basic finance principles, high-beta and high-volatility stocks have long underperformed low-beta and low-volatility stocks. This anomaly may be partly explained by the fact that the typical institutional investor's mandate to beat a fixed benchmark discourages arbitrage activity in both high-alpha, low-beta stocks and low-alpha, high-beta stocks.What Happens if Bond Yields Jump Up? Some Stocks Will Suffer More Than OthersGovernment bonds comove more strongly with bond-like stocks: stocks of large, mature, low-volatility, profitable, dividend-paying firms that are neither high growth nor distressed. Variables derived from the yield curve that are already known to predict returns on bonds also predict returns on bond-like stocks; investor sentiment, a predictor of the cross section of stock returns, also predicts excess bond returns. These relationships remain in place even when bonds and stocks become "decoupled" at the index level. They are driven by a combination of effects including correlations between real cash flows on bonds and bond-like stocks, correlations between their risk-based return premia, and periodic flights to quality.
The New Field of "Behavioral Corporate Finance" Aims to Explain How Irrationally Exuberant Markets and Managers Shape Corporate Financing DecisionsIn this chapter, we survey the theory and evidence of behavioral corporate finance, which generally takes one of two approaches. The market timing and catering approach views managerial financing and investment decisions as rational managerial responses to securities mispricing. The managerial biases approach studies the direct effects of managers' biases and nonstandard preferences on their decisions. We review relevant psychology, economic theory and predictions, empirical challenges, empirical evidence, new directions such as behavioral signaling, and open questions.
Why Was It Hard to Get a Deal Done in 2009? Target Firms Try to 'Break Even' So Past Price Peaks Like the 52-Week High Play a Role in Deal Negotiations and Merger WavesPrior stock price peaks of targets affect several aspects of merger and acquisition activity. Offer prices are biased toward recent peak prices although they are economically unremarkable. An offer's probability of acceptance jumps discontinuously when it exceeds a peak price. Conversely, bidder shareholders react more negatively as the offer price is influenced upward toward a peak. Merger waves occur when high returns on the market and likely targets make it easier for bidders to offer a peak price. Parties thus appear to use recent peaks as reference points or anchors to simplify the complex tasks of valuation and negotiation.
- Journal Articles
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- Baker, Malcolm, Daniel Bergstresser, George Serafeim, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "The Pricing and Ownership of U.S. Green Bonds." Annual Review of Financial Economics 14 (2022): 415–437. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Mathias F. Hoeyer, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Leverage and the Beta Anomaly." Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 55, no. 5 (August 2020): 1491–1514. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Commentary: Is the 'Incredible Shrinking Universe of Stocks' a Bad Thing?" Pensions & Investments (online) (October 20, 2017). View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Ryan Taliaferro, and Terry Burnham. "Optimal Tilts: Combining Persistent Characteristic Portfolios." Financial Analysts Journal 73, no. 4 (Fourth Quarter 2017): 75–89. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Risk Neglect in Equity Markets." Journal of Portfolio Management 42, no. 3 (Spring 2016): 12–25. View Details
- Acharya, Viral, Heitor Almeida, and Malcolm Baker. "Introduction: New Perspectives on Corporate Capital Structure." Journal of Financial Economics 118, no. 3 (December 2015): 551–552. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Yuhai Xuan. "Under New Management: Equity Issues and the Attribution of Past Returns." Journal of Financial Economics 121, no. 1 (July 2016): 66–78. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Brock Mendel, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Dividends as Reference Points: A Behavioral Signaling Approach." Review of Financial Studies 29, no. 3 (March 2016): 697–738. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Do Strict Capital Requirements Raise the Cost of Capital? Bank Regulation, Capital Structure and the Low Risk Anomaly." American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings 105, no. 5 (May 2015): 315–320. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Brendan Bradley, and Ryan Taliaferro. "The Low-Risk Anomaly: A Decomposition into Micro and Macro Effects." Financial Analysts Journal 70, no. 2 (March–April 2014): 43–58. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Raising Capital Requirements: At What Cost?" Review of Financial Regulation Studies, no. 11 (Summer 2013): 4–6. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Comovement and Predictability Relationships Between Bonds and the Cross-Section of Stocks." Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2, no. 1 (June 2012): 57–87. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Xin Pan, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "The Effect of Reference Point Prices on Mergers and Acquisitions." Journal of Financial Economics 106, no. 1 (October 2012): 49–71. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Jeffrey Wurgler, and Yu Yuan. "Global, Local, and Contagious Investor Sentiment." Journal of Financial Economics 104, no. 2 (May 2012): 272–287. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Brendan Bradley, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Benchmarks as Limits to Arbitrage: Understanding the Low-Volatility Anomaly." Financial Analysts Journal 67, no. 1 (January–February 2011). View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Lubomir Litov, Jessica Wachter, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Can Mutual Fund Managers Pick Stocks? Evidence from Their Trades Prior to Earnings Announcements." Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 45, no. 5 (October 2010): 1111 –1131. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Robin Greenwood, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Catering Through Nominal Share Prices." Journal of Finance 64, no. 6 (December 2009): 2559–2590. (Internet Appendix.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Capital Market-Driven Corporate Finance." Annual Review of Financial Economics 1 (2009): 181–205. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, C. Fritz Foley, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Multinationals as Arbitrageurs? The Effect of Stock Market Valuations on Foreign Direct Investment." Review of Financial Studies 22, no. 1 (January 2009): 337–369. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Review of The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism, by John Bogle." Journal of Economic Literature 46, no. 3 (September 2008): 731–735. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Johnathan Wang, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "How Does Investor Sentiment Affect the Cross-Section of Returns." Journal of Investment Management 6, no. 2 (Second Quarter 2008): 57–72. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Joshua Coval, and Jeremy Stein. "Corporate Financing Decisions When Investors Take the Path of Least Resistance." Journal of Financial Economics 84, no. 2 (May 2007): 266–298. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Investor Sentiment in the Stock Market." Journal of Economic Perspectives 21, no. 2 (Spring 2007): 129–151. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Stefan Nagel, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "The Effect of Dividends on Consumption." Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, no. 1 (2007): 277–291. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Investor Sentiment and the Cross Section of Stock Returns." Journal of Finance 61, no. 4 (August 2006): 1645–1680. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Ryan Taliaferro, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Predicting Returns with Managerial Decision Variables: Is There a Small-Sample Bias?" Journal of Finance 61, no. 4 (August 2006): 1711–1730. (Section V of "Pseudo Market Timing and Predictive Regressions, NBER Working Paper Series, No. 10823, contains additional analyses.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Appearing and Disappearing Dividends: The Link to Catering Incentives." Journal of Financial Economics 73, no. 2 (August 2004): 271–288. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "A Catering Theory of Dividends." Journal of Finance 59, no. 3 (June 2004): 1125–1165. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeremy Stein. "Market Liquidity as a Sentiment Indicator." Journal of Financial Markets 7, no. 3 (June 2004): 271–299. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Robin Greenwood, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "The Maturity of Debt Issues and Predictable Variation in Bond Returns." Journal of Financial Economics 70, no. 2 (November 2003): 261–291. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Paul Gompers. "The Determinants of Board Structure at the Initial Public Offering." Journal of Law & Economics 46, no. 2 (October 2003): 569–598. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Jeremy Stein, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "When Does the Market Matter? Stock Prices and the Investment of Equity-Dependent Firms." Quarterly Journal of Economics 118, no. 3 (August 2003): 969–1006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Serkan Savasoglu. "Limited Arbitrage in Mergers and Acquisitions." Journal of Financial Economics 64, no. 1 (April 2002): 91–116. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Market Timing and Capital Structure." Journal of Finance 57, no. 1 (February 2002): 1–32. (Winner of Brattle Prize. First Prize Paper For outstanding papers on corporate finance published in the Journal of Finance presented by Brattle Group, Inc. Reprinted in Recent Developments in Corporate Finance, edited by Jay Ritter. Edward Elgar Publishing: UK, 2005.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "The Equity Share in New Issues and Aggregate Stock Returns." Journal of Finance 55, no. 5 (October 2000): 2219–57. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, E. S. Mayfield, and John Parsons. "Alternative Models of Uncertain Commodity Prices for Use with Modern Asset Pricing Methods." Energy Journal 19, no. 1 (1998): 115–148. View Details
- Book Chapters
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- Baker, Malcolm. "The Program in Corporate Finance." NBER Reporter, no. 1 (March 2017). View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Behavioral Corporate Finance: A Current Survey." In Handbook of the Economics of Finance, Volume 2A: Corporate Finance, edited by George M. Constantinides, Milton Harris, and Rene M. Stulz, 357–424. Handbooks in Economics. New York: Elsevier, 2013. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Richard Ruback, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Behavioral Corporate Finance: A Survey." In The Handbook of Corporate Finance, Volume 1: Empirical Corporate Finance, edited by Espen Eckbo. New York: Elsevier/North-Holland, 2007. View Details
- Working Papers
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- Baker, Malcolm, Mark Egan, and Suproteem K. Sarkar. "How Do Investors Value ESG?" NBER Working Paper Series, No. 30708, December 2022. (Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 23-028, November 2022.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Patrick Luo, and Ryan Taliaferro. "Detecting Anomalies: The Relevance and Power of Standard Asset Pricing Tests." Working Paper, July 2018. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Jeffrey Wurgler. "Do Strict Capital Requirements Raise the Cost of Capital? Banking Regulation and the Low Risk Anomaly." NBER Working Paper Series, No. 19018, May 2013. View Details
- Cases and Teaching Materials
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- Baker, Malcolm, and Sebastian Hillenbrand. "Cost of Capital at DraftKings." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 224-081, May 2024. (Revised May 2024.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Elisabeth Kempf, and Jonathan Wallen. "Optimalen Capital." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 224-083, May 2024. (Revised May 2024.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Cost of Capital at DraftKings." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 224-708, September 2023. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Sebastian Hillenbrand, and James Barnett. "Cost of Capital at DraftKings." Harvard Business School Case 224-007, September 2023. (Revised May 2024.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Elisabeth Kempf, and Jonathan Wallen. "Optimalen Capital Spreadsheet Supplement." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 223-715, June 2023. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Elisabeth Kempf, and Jonathan Wallen. "Optimalen Capital." Harvard Business School Case 223-099, June 2023. (Revised May 2024.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Joshua D. Coval. "Hamilton." Harvard Business School Case 222-018, July 2021. (Revised July 2022.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Ishita Sen, and Jonathan Wallen. "Dicerna." Harvard Business School Case 223-049, November 2022. (Revised May 2023.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "The Mighty Squirrel Brewery and Taproom." Harvard Business School Case 223-003, August 2022. (Revised October 2022.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and William Vrattos. "Thrive Earlier Detection." Harvard Business School Case 222-049, December 2021. (Revised December 2021.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Samuel Gregory Hanson, Jonathan Wallen, and Zach Komes. "The Impact Developers Fund." Harvard Business School Case 222-046, January 2022. (Revised January 2022.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Emily R. McComb. "Celgene." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 218-743, April 2018. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Emily McComb. "Celgene (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 218-099, March 2018. (Revised May 2018.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Emily McComb. "Celgene." Harvard Business School Case 218-094, March 2018. (Revised May 2018.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Corning, 2002." Harvard Business School Case 216-037, December 2015. (Revised May 2017.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Samuel G. Hanson, and James Weber. "Longbow Capital Partners." Harvard Business School Case 215-026, February 2015. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Samuel G. Hanson, and James Weber. "Dogs of the Dow." Harvard Business School Case 215-020, January 2015. (Revised October 2018.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Adi Sunderam. "Restructuring JAL." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 215-041, January 2015. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm. "Restructuring at Nova Chemical Corporation (Abridged), Spreadsheet Supplement." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 214-703, November 2013. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Adi Sunderam, Nobuo Sato, and Akiko Kanno. "Restructuring JAL." Harvard Business School Case 214-055, November 2013. (Revised January 2015.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and James Quinn. "Berkshire Partners: Bidding for Carter's, Spreadsheet Supplement." Harvard Business Publishing Supplement, 2010. Electronic. (Spreadsheet supplement for case number 205058.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and James Quinn. "The MCI Takeover Battle: Verizon versus Qwest." Harvard Business School Case 206-045, November 2005. (Revised October 2012.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and David Lane. "Berkshire Partners: Bidding for Carter's (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 211-709, February 2011. (Revised November 2011.) View Details
- Mason, Scott P. "Restructuring at Nova Chemical Corporation (Abridged)." Harvard Business School Case 213-075, November 2012. (Revised September 2013.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and David Lane. "Matrix Capital Management (A)." Harvard Business School Case 211-017, January 2011. (Revised January 2015.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and James Quinn. "Berkshire Partners: Bidding for Carter's." Harvard Business School Case 205-058, April 2005. (Revised August 2011.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and David Lane. "The Auction for Burger King (A) (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 211-712, February 2011. (Revised February 2011.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and David Lane. "Matrix Capital Management (A) (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 211-713, February 2011. (Revised January 2015.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and David Lane. "Matrix Capital Management (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 211-048, January 2011. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and David Lane. "Matrix Capital Management (C)." Harvard Business School Supplement 211-060, January 2011. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, Carlos M. Galvez, and James Quinn. "Fortress Investment Group." Harvard Business School Case 208-080, January 2008. (Revised March 2009.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and James Quinn. "Opportunity Partners (courseware)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 208-711, January 2008. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Multifactor Models (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 207-710, February 2007. (Revised January 2008.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Market Making Exercise." Harvard Business School Exercise 207-033, September 2006. (Revised November 2007.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Elizabeth Kind. "Wells Fargo Convertible Bonds (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 208-704, September 2007. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and James Quinn. "The MCI Takeover Battle: Verizon versus Qwest (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 208-705, September 2007. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and James Quinn. "Corning: Convertible Preferred Stock (CW)." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 208-706, September 2007. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Aldo Sesia. "Behavioral Finance at JP Morgan." Harvard Business School Case 207-084, February 2007. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Multifactor Models." Harvard Business School Exercise 207-056, January 2007. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and James Quinn. "Corning, 2002." Harvard Business School Case 206-018, December 2005. (Revised November 2006.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., Chris Lombardi, and Aldo Sesia. "Selling Biovail Short." Harvard Business School Case 207-071, November 2006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Berkshire Partners: Bidding for Carter's (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 207-029, September 2006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Earnings Management Exercise." Harvard Business School Exercise 207-034, September 2006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Corning: Convertible Preferred Stock (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 207-030, September 2006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "The MCI Takeover Battle: Verizon versus Qwest (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 207-031, September 2006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Lauren Barley. "Investment Banking at Thomas Weisel Partners." Harvard Business School Case 206-091, February 2006. (Revised August 2006.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and James Quinn. "Auctioning Morningstar." Harvard Business School Case 206-023, February 2006. (Revised August 2006.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Lauren Barley. "Siebel Systems: The Role of the CFO." Harvard Business School Case 205-068, March 2005. (Revised August 2006.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Elizabeth Kind. "Wells Fargo Convertible Bonds." Harvard Business School Case 206-022, March 2006. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Dividend Policy at Linear Technology." Harvard Business School Spreadsheet Supplement 204-702, February 2004. (Revised February 2004.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Alison Berkley Wagonfeld. "Dividend Policy at Linear Technology." Harvard Business School Case 204-066, October 2003. (Revised February 2004.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., Richard S. Ruback, Erik Stafford, and Kathleen Luchs. "Giant Cinema." Harvard Business School Case 204-052, September 2003. (Revised January 2004.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P. "Dividend Policy at Linear Technology (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 204-084, October 2003. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., and Richard S. Ruback. "Pharmacyclics: Financing Research and Development (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 204-012, August 2003. View Details
- Baker, Malcolm P., Richard S. Ruback, and Aldo Sesia. "Pharmacyclics: Financing Research & Development." Harvard Business School Case 201-056, January 2001. (Revised July 2003.) View Details
- Other Publications and Materials
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- Baker, Malcolm. "Career Concerns and Staged Investment: Evidence from the Venture Capital Industry." 2000. (First draft in 2000.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and Paul Gompers. "Executive Ownership and Control in Newly Public Firms: The Role of Venture Capitalists." November 1999. (First draft in 1998.) View Details
- Baker, Malcolm, and R. S. Ruback. "Estimating Industry Multiples." 1999. View Details
- Teaching
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This is a CORE course for students pursuing careers in finance. Thus, students interested in pursuing careers in mutual funds, hedge funds, pension funds, endowments, wealth management, financial consulting, marketing and client service, sales and trading, investment banking, private equity, venture capital, and corporate finance should enroll in the course. More broadly, many students have found that a thorough understanding of capital markets and the business of investment management is valuable in a wider set of careers outside of finance and in managing their personal wealth.
There are two CORE courses in capital markets in the elective curriculum: Investment Management and Investment Strategies. The focus of Investment Management is on the money management industry. The course takes the perspective of both the managers of asset management firms and institutional investors like endowments and sovereign wealth funds. From these viewpoints, students consider issues of growth and profitability, product design and innovation, client engagement, organizational design, performance evaluation, asset allocation, and portfolio risk management. The focus of Investment Strategies is on financial markets, principally equity markets, taking the perspective of a portfolio manager and considering the efficacy of value investing, growth investing, arbitrage, macroeconomic investing, tactical asset allocation, and other active investment strategies.
Finance for Senior Executives provides the frameworks to strategically use financial resources and position your company for future success. By examining corporate finance from both internal and external perspectives, this HBS Executive Education leadership development offering enables you to establish the best financial systems for management and control—and utilize capital markets for the most profitable outcomes. You will leave with the strategies and tools to improve your company's bottom line and to take on new responsibilities over time.
Specifically, you will be better able to:
§ Position your company to compete in today's volatile global marketplace and to seize opportunities when the market expands
§ Establish successful and realistic performance plans, incentives, and financial controls at the corporate and divisional levels
§ Employ proven forecasting methods that enable you to predict and monitor outcomes with greater confidence
§ Recognize and address biases within financial systems and structures
§ Master the workings of capital structure and capital markets to ensure better strategic decision making in an economic downturn
§ Balance profit, growth, and control in highly dynamic environments
§ Understand and implement optimal restructuring strategies
§ Work more effectively with a diverse range of colleagues in financial roles inside and outside your organizationI currently teach Finance 1 in the required curriculum. In the past, I have taught Finance 2, I have taught in the elective curriculum - Investment Strategies and Behavioral Finance - and I have taught in executive courses, including Finance for Senior Executives and the Investment Management Workshop. - Awards & Honors
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Received the 2021 HBS Student Association Faculty Award for Outstanding Teaching.Winner of a 2014 Graham and Dodd Scroll Award from the Financial Analysts Journal with Brendan Bradley and Ryan Taliaferro for “The Low-Risk Anomaly: A Decomposition into Micro and Macro Effects” (March–April 2014).Second Place Winner of the 2012 Jensen Prize for the Best Corporate Finance Paper Published in the Journal of Financial Economics for "The Effect of Reference Point Prices on Mergers and Acquisitions" (with Xin Pan and Jeffrey Wurgler, October 2012).Received a 2011 Graham and Dodd Scroll Award from the Financial Analysts Journal with Brendan Bradley and Jeffrey Wurgler for "Benchmarks as Limits to Arbitrage: Understanding the Low-Volatility Anomaly" (January–February 2011).Received a 2011 Emerald Management Review Citation of Excellence Award for his paper with Jeffrey Wurgler, “Investor Sentiment in the Stock Market” (The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2007).Won the William F. Sharpe Award for Best Paper in 2011 for his paper with Lubomir Litov, Jessica A. Wachter, and Jeffrey Wurgler, “Can Mutual Fund Managers Pick Stocks? Evidence from Their Trades Prior to Earnings Announcements” (Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, October 2010).Nominated for the 2006 Smith Breeden Prize for the Best Finance Research Paper Published in the Journal of Finance for his paper with Jeffrey Wurgler, "Investor Sentiment and the Cross Section of Stock Returns" (August 2006).Winner of the 2005 Glucksman Prize from the Glucksman Institute for Research in Security Markets Prize at New York University. Also won Second Place in 2003 and 2010.Nominated for the 2004 Brattle Prize for Outstanding Paper in Corporate Finance in the Journal of Finance for his paper with Jeffrey Wurgler. "A Catering Theory of Dividends." (June 2004).Received the 2004 Robert F. Greenhill Award.Winner of the 2002 Brattle Prize for Outstanding Paper in Corporate Finance in the Journal of Finance for "Market Timing and Capital Structure" (with Jeffrey Wurgler, February 2002).Winner of the 1998 George S. Dively Award for outstanding dissertation research for "Essays in Financial Economics" (Harvard University, PhD, 2000).Received the 2018 Robert F. Greenhill Award.Inducted into the Brown University Athletic Hall of Fame in 2016.Received the 2015 Charles M. Williams Award for Teaching Excellence.
- Additional Information
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Affiliations
- Areas of Interest
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- behavioral finance
- capital structure
- corporate finance
- investment management
- market efficiency
- IPO
- asset pricing
- boards of directors
- capital markets
- cash flow analysis
- cognition
- corporate governance
- cost of capital
- financial engineering
- financial management
- foreign direct investment
- investment banking
- investor behavior
- mergers and acquisitions
- valuation
- asset management
- biotechnology
- financial services
- high technology
- investment banking industry
- pharmaceuticals
- private equity (LBO funds)
- shipping
- transportation
- Asia
- Europe
- North America
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