Most companies use asset leasing for business reasons, not accounting window dressing
They don’t trade at an absolute equal to intrinsic value, despite their image as the world’s investment bedrock
Malignant personalities loom large in workplace happiness and a supervisor’s positive tone carries only so far
Buyers of private firms signal willingness to move fast
Management and real estate deals to owners’ firms siphon off most profits
Forced sale of assets could stretch illiquidity across industries
A mathematical model analyzes incentives underlying surge-pricing schemes
A model separates potential profits or losses for hospital, doctors and other health care providers when insurer pays in lump sum
Managers, forced to inform a broader audience, choose not to gather information even for themselves
Employing a distinct part of the brain, they’re better at imagining a distant future and seeing others’ points of view
Do bigger companies win even when they lose out on corrupt deals?
A tool in the debate over shareholder primacy and wealth disparities