From jcf-skills
Evaluates whether a corporate-finance question fits the Journal of Corporate Finance and chooses between full-length or shorter format paper.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jcf-skills:jcf-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Deciding if a question belongs at JCF versus a general finance or accounting outlet
JCF (Elsevier) publishes empirical and theoretical corporate finance. In-scope themes include:
A pure asset-pricing test, a macro paper with no firm decision, or an accounting-measurement study with no corporate-finance question is off-fit.
JCF explicitly invites shorter format papers alongside full articles, with no fixed maximum length stated (待核实 — no numeric ceiling found). Use the shorter format for a clean, well-identified single result; reserve full length for a multi-mechanism study with extensive robustness.
Write one row before committing:
Decision/friction | Setting | Variation/model | Main outcome | Finance mechanism | Likely format
A viable JCF topic has a firm-side decision or contracting problem at the center. If the outcome is only a stock return, macro shock, or accounting metric, explain how it changes corporate financing, governance, investment, payout, risk management, innovation, or M&A. If you cannot name that mechanism, the project is probably better routed to another finance or accounting outlet.
Project profile | Likely home
Firm decision + credible shock + one mechanism | JCF (shorter format if single-result)
Firm decision + broad theory contribution | JCF full-length; a top general outlet if general-interest
Returns prediction with no firm decision | Asset-pricing outlet, not JCF
Disclosure/earnings-quality core | Accounting journal unless a financing decision is central
Bank/intermediary supply-side question | Intermediation outlet; JCF if the borrowing firm is the object
Household or entrepreneur portfolio choice | JCF only via an entrepreneurial-finance framing
Methods innovation shown on firm data | Econometrics/methods venue; JCF wants the question
Hypothetical: "Do antitrust-review delays change acquirer behavior?" Matrix row (illustrative): Decision/friction = deal completion and renegotiation under regulatory uncertainty | Setting = deals near a review threshold | Variation = a threshold-rule change | Main outcome = completion rates and termination-fee design | Finance mechanism = bargaining power and deal-protection contracting | Likely format = full-length (two mechanisms: selection of announced deals plus contract redesign). The check that matters: completion is a firm decision and the fee design is a contracting outcome — both inside JCF's remit. Had the only defensible outcome been announcement returns, the row would fail and the project would belong in an asset-pricing conversation.
A JCF-viable topic usually pairs the question with identifying variation on day one. Inventory candidates early: staggered statutes and governance mandates, regulatory size thresholds, index-membership rules and shareholder-vote margins (RDD material), tax reforms touching payout or financing, court rulings shifting creditor rights, disclosure-regime changes. If no plausible shock, structural model, or hand-collected wedge exists, expect the endogeneity objection to dominate the desk screen — pick a different question, or collect the data that creates the wedge (contract terms, within-firm variation).
【Fit】in-scope corporate-finance theme? [Y/N] — <theme>
【Format】full-length / shorter — <reason>
【Desk risk】<low/med/high> + fix
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jcf-skillsUse when judging whether a research question is general-interest and economically significant enough for The Journal of Finance (JF), and when sharpening the framing. Tests fit and contribution; it does not design the empirics.
Scopes and pressure-tests a research question for Journal of Financial Economics manuscripts before data work begins.
Routes finance manuscripts to the right journal (JBF, JFI, JCF, etc.) based on topic, institutional content, and empirical/theoretical fit.