The Making of Fashionable Company Finance. 2025. Donald H. Chew, Jr. Columbia College Press, Out there February 2025.
Donald Chew’s forthcoming guide, The Making of Fashionable Company Finance, is a love letter to those that revealed within the Journal of Utilized Company Finance, of which the writer is the founder and stays its publishing editor. It’s a love letter to unfettered capitalism and the monetary system that oils the gears of commerce. The guide will likely be of curiosity to a broad readership however needs to be required studying for CFA charterholders, like me, who pursued their designation many years in the past and who could have — whereas maintaining with the day-to-day developments in finance — missed the broader perspective on the monetary improvements that underpin immediately’s world system.
The subtitle, “A Historical past of the Concepts and How They Assist Construct the Wealth of Nations,” aptly describes the guide’s narrative arc as it really works chronologically via 4 “core topics”:
The company funding determination
The company financing determination
Enterprise danger administration
Company governance and investor communication
After a chapter case research on Japan that successfully hyperlinks company finance and social wealth, the historical past begins with Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller’s late Fifties and early Nineteen Sixties work on “capital construction and dividend irrelevance.” Quite than capital construction, traders ought to concentrate on earnings energy — funding in tasks that earn no less than their price of capital — and the way company dangers are managed. If capital construction is a pink herring, so too is the concentrate on near-term earnings per share (EPS). Chew presents, as a superb instance: traders who targeted on quarterly EPS figures fairly than future earnings energy at Amazon.
The writer follows his sturdy opening with a dialogue of Michael Jensen and William Meckling’s well-cited paper on the company prices {of professional} administration to the pursuits of helpful house owners, i.e., shareholders. Available in the market for company management, administration is incented to develop fairly than concentrate on earnings energy. This led to company takeovers in disparate sectors and to the bloated conglomerates of the Nineteen Seventies, which in flip fostered the reimposition of management via leveraged buyouts (LBOs) and, finally, non-public fairness.
The hefty curiosity funds imposed by the debt financing of LBOs redirected administration’s consideration from acquisitions to operational effectivity. The non-public fairness (PE) company construction eradicated Jensen and Meckling’s company problem by controlling board seats or wholesale removing of goal firms from public markets.
With every theoretical growth — Modigliani and Miller, Jensen and Meckling and Stewart Meyers, who helped incorporate the Weighted Common Value of Capital (WACC)) into discounted money move methodologies and subsequently into company selections to proceed or abandon a challenge, and Clifford Smith and Rene Stulz, whose work confirmed the significance of company danger administration as an integral part of maximizing shareholder returns – there have been practitioners keen to make use of the brand new instruments. Practitioners included firm administration, who adopted Bennet Stewart’s idea of “financial worth added” (EVA), which resulted in a shift of duty from a centralized EPS focus to the varied working items and a concentrate on earnings energy.
Fashionable company finance additionally included a reimagination of company incentive construction for executives. Chew contends that if executives at PE-owned firms are paid like house owners (recall that this helps eradicate the company problem), executives at public firms needs to be paid in a similar way. If pay construction and quantity are insufficient, public firms will change into mere coaching grounds for the very best leaders as they search superior pay beneath non-public fairness. Chew discusses at some size the optimum construction of long-term incentives.
Lastly, the transformation of company finance included the event of latest markets to help monetary improvements. Longtime readers of CFA Institute Monetary Analysts Journal and different publications will likely be delighted to see a full chapter highlighting the pivotal position of guide evaluation editor Marty Fridson in serving to develop the excessive yield debt markets that accommodated the surge of debt related to LBOs.
The previous paragraphs give a way of the guide’s construction and content material. Nonetheless, the overarching narrative is of the US’s financial energy– not its amassed capital or navy power, however its monetary innovation and dynamism. The opening chapter on Japan is bookended by a concluding chapter on China and the variations between its monetary system and that of the US. To date, Chew contends, the Chinese language monetary system has fallen wanting its promise because it has traded off innovation and dynamism for state management — a façade of Western capital markets however with out the substance.
Examples from historical past and geography are thought-provoking. For instance, a parallel may be drawn between Nineteen Seventies conglomerates and immediately’s expansive expertise firms, which exhibit each synergies, e.g., Alphabet and promoting, and silos, resembling Amazon’s AWS and on-line gross sales portal, throughout a number of enterprise traces.
Have the managers of those enterprises solved the company problem recognized by Jensen and Meckling and developed higher governance and extra disciplined administration? Many have dual-class share constructions, which tilt management nearer to the PE mannequin, however as Chew notes, the impact could also be time-limited. Shareholders could settle for founder management during times of superior development however advocate an eventual swap to a one-share, one-vote regime.
Would possibly the expertise giants’ expansive attain replicate different components resembling market focus and monopoly or oligopoly returns? That is clearly a distinct topic than Chew units out to handle (see Tim Wu’s guide, The Curse of Bigness). A second set of questions arises when Chew hyperlinks the lofty US inventory market valuations to the nation’s monetary dynamism. Whereas he makes a compelling case, market historians will notice that the premiums of US and worldwide fairness markets have seesawed backwards and forwards over time.

All through the guide, Chew emphasizes the prevalence of the US mannequin and the ability of company finance to generate wealth and alleviate environmental and social issues. To this finish, he features a considerate dialogue on ESG points and their relevance to firms and boards. Nonetheless, at occasions, his feedback are too broad and categorical about firms’ position in addressing points and too dismissive of presidency’s position in offering the foundations and infrastructure upon which firms rely. Lots of the points arose from company actions within the first place and may not have been addressed with out stakeholder or authorities motion to pressure the problems.
That could be a small grievance, to make sure, given the guide’s consideration to element, considerate and fascinating construction, and energetic anecdotes. What in much less succesful palms could be a dry textbook is, with Chew’s skilled contact, an exquisite historic overview of company finance and the US’s continued pre-eminence. In case you have favored earlier works on danger and capital markets by Peter Bernstein, you’ll most actually get pleasure from The Making of Company Finance.