Uzi Yaari, Ph.D.
Professor of Finance

Office Room: 435
Phone Number: 856-225-6589
E-Mail: yaari@camden.rutgers.edu
Home Page: http://crab.rutgers.edu/~yaari

Vita : Click here (PDF)

Ph.D.,  University of Chicago

Expertise:  Corporate Finance.

Courses frequently taught:  Corporate Finance  

Research Venues

Dr. Yaari is co-founder of the Multinational Finance Society and the Israel Center for Social Progress.  He is a co-author of papers published in Advances in Futures and Options Research, Advances in Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management, Applied Mathematical Finance, Eastern Economic Journal, European Journal of Finance, Financial Management, the Financial Review, International Journal of Finance, Journal of Banking and Finance, Journal of Economics and Business, Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Research, Journal of Fixed Income, Journal of Law and Economics, Journal of Portfolio Management, Journal of Risk and Insurance, National Tax Journal, and Research in Finance.  He is a contributor to an edited collection entitled FX: Managing Global Currency Risk.  The focus of his current research is the net social value of corporate acquisitions.

Research Content

I. Corporate Finance with Personal Taxation 

Dr. Yaari’s research in corporate finance extends the M&M theory by modeling the economic effects of U.S. personal taxes on the behavior of corporations and their shareholders, and consequent effects on shareholders’ wealth. Findings have further implications for portfolio management and public policy. The flavor of Dr. Yaari’s joint research in this area is conveyed by the following sample of contributions, beginning with the first: 

·         Disproves the dominant academic view that retention is tantamount to tax avoidance by demonstrating that current price appreciation in anticipation of increased future dividends would reflect a commensurate increase in future dividend tax. Moreover, share trading in the presence of capital gains tax (CGT) would increase the personal tax burden. 

·         Derives the conditions under which the dividend tax affects the firm’s cost of capital and investment opportunities. 

·         Derives a post-personal-tax share valuation formula that accounts for the impact of CGT and its deferred realization. 

·         Derives a valuation formula for proprietorships parallel with that of corporations and analyzes the inter-sectoral disparity of tax burden and resource misallocation. 

·         Derives a formula for calculating the effective rate of CGT under deferred share trading.  

·         Analytically shows how the CGT creates a dual share-price path over the dividend cycle, a previously unknown cause of the bid-ask price spread.  

·         Derives a time-consistent share valuation formula for a corporation that follows a perpetual distribution of earnings via stock repurchase.  

·         Analytically demonstrates the adverse effects of inflation on current share prices if CGT is based on nominal gains, or if tax brackets escalate with inflation (two separate studies).  

·         Derives a valuation formula for the Safe Harbor Tax Benefit Transfer Lease (repealed since). 

·         Analytically shows how the impact of personal taxes prevents fair enforcement of the Fair Rate of Return Doctrine defining the treatment of regulated public utilities. 

·         Contrary to the accepted truth, proves that tax-sheltered retirement plans should avoid rather than seek growth stocks. 

·         Derives quantitative rules for optimal diversification of a tax-sheltered equity fund. 

·         Analyzes the way by which preferential tax treatment of market-purchased insurance discourages self insurance.  

·         Proposes, tests, and confirms a theory by which personal tax avoidance turns corporate acquisitions into a profitable financial arbitrage, invisibly paid for by taxpayers at large.  

·         Theoretically demonstrates that the impact of personal taxes can be used by a closed-end investment company to raise the value of its own shares above the value its stock portfolio.  

·         Turns the Pecking Order hypothesis of financial leverage into a quantitative decision model that accommodates static tradeoff in a stochastic dynamic framework.       

II. Markets and Institutions 

The following sample of contributions is contained in Dr. Yaari’s joint papers dealing with financial markets and institutions: 

·         Empirically demonstrates that the interest rate ceiling on commercial bank deposits imposed after the Depression was largely ineffective when measured against its intent of curbing bank costs to promote solvency. 

·         Theoretically explains why the large pension plans typical of companies dominated by a labor union are characterized by a low funding ratio and a high risk of default. 

·         Using a dynamic optimization model, demonstrates that an interior corporate financial leverage is consistent with a market made up of diverse investors holding diverse debt and equity portfolios.  

·         Demonstrates that, in the presence of transaction costs, in-the-money American options written on foreign exchange are likely to offer gainful opportunities in early exercise if they mature in less than 45 days.  

·         Based on simulated data, argues that term-structure estimation methods should be ranked by their power to estimate forward rates, not by their power to explain prices. 

·         Empirically demonstrates that stock portfolio diversification across developed and emerging markets may lose rather than gain by hedging the foreign exchange risk between their currencies.  

·         Develops a discrete arbitrage model for pricing currency options that includes data-based transaction costs of adjusting the replicating asset portfolio, treats the trading interval as endogenous, and is independent of the investor’s risk preference.  

·         Develops a discrete model for pricing options with transaction costs to determine the maximum price charged by an intermediary in a non-auction market where transaction costs induce less frequent trading and therefore a multinomial distribution of asset returns.  

·         Theoretically demonstrates how to lower the cost of immunizing fixed-income contracts in a multi-currency setting by matching asset and liability durations in the portfolio as a whole.  

·         Through simulation of real data, reveals the conditions for efficient immunization of fixed income contracts in a multicurrency setting by matching the overall asset and liability durations.  

·         Empirically demonstrates that dual market stock listing is consistent with unidirectional flow of information. 

·         Derives the conditions under which a traditional market of discrete trading, which relies on dealers or exchange-scheduled sessions, is superior to a continuous non-dealer electronic market.  

·         Uses an event study to show that competitive IPOs, conducted as a Dutch auction that is open to the public, are economically superior to traditional fixed-price IPOs. 

·         Combining an event study and simulation to demonstrate that margin requirements based on a more accurate measurement of default risk lower the probability of default without lowering liquidity (under submission).                                   

 

Media Guide

Dr. Uzi Yaari, professor of finance at the Rutgers School of Business—Camden; co-founder, Multinational Finance Society and the Israel Center of Social Progress. He can discuss: 

+ Corporate and Private Finance:

  • Investment

  • Financing and leverage

  • Distribution policy 

  • IPOs and acquisitions

+Financial Economics:

  • Corporate valuation and growth

  • Taxing corporate-source income

  • Public policy toward business

  • Corporate crime  

 

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