Risk, Duration and Capital Budgeting: New Evidence on Some Old Questions

Abstract
It has been suggested that systematic risk arises not because of correlation between a company‘s cash flow and the market return but primarily because of common variation in expected returns. If true, this hypothesis has important implications for capital budgeting, particularly at high-technology companies that have long duration, idiosyncratic investment projects. This paper presents some new evidence related to the Campbell-Mei hypothesis and then evaluates the impact of the hypothesis with a case study of Amgen Corp.
Volume
72
Page
183-200
Number
2
Year
1999
Categories
RPP1
Publications
Journal of Business
Authors
Cornell, Bradford