The Modigliani-Miller Theorem: Difference between revisions
From Dickinson College Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Williaaa31 (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
---- | ---- | ||
===Neutrality=== | |||
:*A firm’s investment strategy is totally independent of its liquidity position | |||
===Early Keynesians View=== | |||
:*theory contradicts the neutrality | |||
:*emphasized two variables as determinants of investment | |||
::1. current cash flow | |||
::2. a firm’s current holdings of liquid assets | |||
:*both of these variables are a measure of funds available to a firm without seeking outside investment | |||
===Modigliani and Miller=== | |||
:*theory supports the neutrality | |||
:*Modigliani and Miller assume that managers maximize shareholder and that markets are frictionless and competitive | |||
:*Investment is independent from a firm’s financial position because under the given assumptions, a firm will simply borrow funds to invest. Therefore, the amount of current cash flow and the current liquidity position of a firm will not affect its investment. | |||
===Q-Theory=== | |||
James Tobin (1969) | |||
:*A firm will invest up until the point where the marginal cost of producing a new unit of capital is the same as the value of that unit of capital in the stock market. This value is given by the q-ratio | |||
'''q-ratio'''- the market value of a firm’s shares divided by its capital stock | |||
:*According to q-theory current profits are simply one component of many which determine the value of q, and therefore plays no special role in determining investment | |||
[[The Missing Motivations in Macroeconomics]] | [[The Missing Motivations in Macroeconomics]] |
Revision as of 06:20, 26 April 2007
Neutrality
- A firm’s investment strategy is totally independent of its liquidity position
Early Keynesians View
- theory contradicts the neutrality
- emphasized two variables as determinants of investment
- 1. current cash flow
- 2. a firm’s current holdings of liquid assets
- both of these variables are a measure of funds available to a firm without seeking outside investment
Modigliani and Miller
- theory supports the neutrality
- Modigliani and Miller assume that managers maximize shareholder and that markets are frictionless and competitive
- Investment is independent from a firm’s financial position because under the given assumptions, a firm will simply borrow funds to invest. Therefore, the amount of current cash flow and the current liquidity position of a firm will not affect its investment.
Q-Theory
James Tobin (1969)
- A firm will invest up until the point where the marginal cost of producing a new unit of capital is the same as the value of that unit of capital in the stock market. This value is given by the q-ratio
q-ratio- the market value of a firm’s shares divided by its capital stock
- According to q-theory current profits are simply one component of many which determine the value of q, and therefore plays no special role in determining investment
The Missing Motivations in Macroeconomics
|
Ricardian Equivalence
|
Dependence of Consumption on Wealth, not Income
|
Natural Rate Theory
|
Rational Expectations