name: jcf-rebuttal description: Use when preparing a revise-and-resubmit response for the Journal of Corporate Finance (JCF) — a point-by-point reply to two-or-more single-anonymized reviewers and the handling editor, reconciling divergent demands without over-claiming. It structures the response letter and revision plan; it does not run new analysis on its own.
R&R Rebuttal (jcf-rebuttal)
When to trigger
- You received an R&R from JCF and must write the response letter
- Two or more reviewers asked for different or conflicting things
- You need to map each comment to a concrete revision
How JCF R&R works
JCF review is single anonymized with a minimum of two reviewers, so you typically face two independent sets of demands plus the editor's priorities. Reviewers see your identity; the editor decides whether the revision clears the bar. Address every point, but prioritize the editor's framing.
Response-letter structure
- Cover note to the editor: thank them, summarize the main changes, and state how the revision resolves the core concern. Flag any request you respectfully decline and why.
- Per-reviewer sections: restate each comment verbatim, then your response, then the exact change (section/table/page).
- Reconcile conflicts: when reviewers disagree, state the trade-off, choose a defensible path, and show both robustness results where feasible.
Revision discipline
- Every comment has a numbered, traceable response
- New analyses are added as robustness, not a redesign that contradicts the paper
- Identification concerns answered with diagnostics/placebos, not rhetoric (see jcf-identification-strategy)
- No new over-claiming; scope still matches the design
- Updated Option C data-availability statement / archive if the empirics changed
- Abstract still ≤ 250 words; references still consistent (see jcf-writing-style)
Reviewer-conflict table
Use this when reviewers push in different directions:
Issue | Reviewer A asks | Reviewer B asks | Editor signal | Chosen response | Evidence added
The chosen response should protect the corporate-finance mechanism and the identification design. If a requested analysis would answer a different paper, acknowledge the point, add the closest feasible diagnostic, and state why the manuscript keeps its original scope. Do not let an R&R turn a clean shorter format paper into an unfocused full-length paper.
Comment-type playbook for JCF reviews
Comment type | Typical JCF ask | Response move
Identification | Modern DID estimator; selection discussion | New diagnostic + estimator table, not rhetoric
Magnitude | "Is this economically big?" | Convert to % of mean / 1-SD; add a magnitudes row
Sample | Filters, financials exclusion, survivorship | Reconstruction table; result on the alternate sample
Mechanism | "Why does this happen?" | Cross-sectional splits the channel predicts
Generalizability | One shock, one country | Bound the claim; add an external-validity paragraph
Framing / fit | "Is this corporate finance?" | Reframe the headline on the firm decision
Worked reply: the staggered-DID demand
Hypothetical, numbers illustrative: Reviewer 1 writes "TWFE on staggered adoption is biased; use Callaway–Sant'Anna." The reply that works at JCF: (1) restate the comment verbatim; (2) report the new estimate — TWFE 0.024 versus CS 0.015, both significant — in a new table promoted to the main text; (3) move the Bacon decomposition showing where TWFE weight sat into the appendix; (4) one sentence in the letter: "The headline estimate is now the heterogeneity-robust one; conclusions are unchanged in sign, economically smaller, and the text now reports the smaller magnitude." No defensiveness, and no claim that the old estimator was fine.
Routing new material in the revision
Common practice for JCF revisions (confirm against the journal's current author guidelines): the main text absorbs analyses that change the headline or defend identification; bulk robustness moves to an appendix or a separately uploaded internet appendix referenced by exhibit number. In the letter, point to exact locations — "now Table 6, Panel B; Internet Appendix Table IA.4" — so two independent reviewers can verify changes without re-reading the full paper. If reviewers demanded conflicting estimators, run both, table both, and let the letter state which one the text features and why.
Anti-patterns
- A response that argues without changing the paper.
- Silently ignoring a point the editor cares about.
- Caving to one reviewer in a way that breaks the other's concern.
- Letting the revision quietly over-claim beyond the design.
Output
【Editor note】main changes + core concern resolved? [Y/N]
【Per-reviewer】each comment → response → exact change? [Y/N]
【Conflicts】reconciled with trade-off stated? [Y/N]
【Integrity】no new over-claim; ID diagnostics added? [Y/N]