TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide insight into how environmental information is reflected in the market value of listed Swedish companies using the residual income valuation model, which is used in this paper.
Abstract: This paper provides insight into how environmental information is reflected in the market value of listed Swedish companies. Using the residual income valuation model, we express market value of eq ...
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the value relevance of fair value data disclosed under SFAS 107 by banks for 1992 and 1993 and concluded that differences between fair and book values of financial instruments are associated with market-to-book ratios.
TL;DR: The idea that complementary assets (especially business process design and human capital) influence the firm’s realization of value is developed, using concepts such as locus of value and value conversion contingencies.
Abstract: Information technology (IT) value has been measured at various levels of analysis, yet few authors would contend that the search for value has reached a point where practitioners and theoreticians are satisfied with its outcomes. We present a new perspective that emphasizes the importance of understanding where potential value lies and how best to relate it contextually to the measurement of the firm's realized value across multiple levels of analysis. We develop the idea that complementary assets (especially business process design and human capital) influence the firm's realization of value, using concepts such as locus of value and value conversion contingencies. Expanding beyond earlier process models of IT value, which begin with IT expenditure, our analysis of IT value emphasizes the consideration of potential value for an IT investment both in ex ante project selection, and ex post investment evaluation. We illustrate and validate the application of our framework using IT investments in a variety of business domains.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the market value of firms that reorganize in bankruptcy with estimates of value based on management's published cash flow projections, using models that have been shown in other contexts to generate a relatively precise estimate of value.
Abstract: This study compares the market value of firms that reorganize in bankruptcy with estimates of value based on management’s published cash flow projections. We estimate firm values using models that have been shown in other contexts to generate relatively precise estimates of value. We find that these methods generally yield unbiased estimates of value, but the dispersion of valuation errors is very widethe sample ratio of estimated value to market value varies from less than 20% to greater than 250%. Cross-sectional analysis indicates that the variation in these errors is related to empirical proxies for claimholders’ incentives to overstate or understate the firm’s value.