EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

Book Essays on Business Relations and Corporate Finance

Download or read book Essays on Business Relations and Corporate Finance written by İrem Demirci and published by . This book was released on 2013 with total page 200 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation studies the impact of business relations on firms' financing decisions. The goal is to understand the determinants of business relations and how they interact with firms' capital structure. In the first chapter, I present a model which studies the role of customer risk in suppliers' financing choice. The base model predicts that when faced with a high-risk customer, suppliers with significant continuation values prefer equity over debt. The extended model allows for analyzing the supplier's decision to concentrate on a single major customer or diversify into multiple customers. The model shows that by decreasing the risk of premature liquidation, diversification allows for the supplier to take advantage of the bargaining benefits of debt. The second chapter empirically investigates the impact of customer risk on suppliers' capital structure. Consistent with the model presented in the first chapter, both cross-sectional and time-series regression results show that customer risk has a negative impact on suppliers' debt financing. Customer risk is an important determinant of suppliers' method of financing as well. During the first two years of the relationship, suppliers with high-risk customers are more likely to raise equity. Comparing the impact of customer risk on different supplier groups shows that firms that operate in concentrated industries and younger firms are more sensitive to changes in customer risk. In further analyses I find that the risk is transferred from customers to suppliers: There is a lead-lag relationship between customer and supplier credit rating changes. Also, suppliers experience an increase in volatility of their stock returns after they start a new relationship with a risky customer. Results from further analyses are suggestive of customer risk affecting capital structure through its impact on supplier risk.

Book Three Essays in Corporate Finance

Download or read book Three Essays in Corporate Finance written by Jérôme Philippe Alain Taillard and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 210 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Abstract: In my dissertation, I first contribute to the capital structure literature by estimating the potential impact of financial distress on a firm's real business operations. Secondly, I contribute to the ownership structure literature, and more broadly to the field of corporate governance, by revisiting the relationship between managerial ownership and firm performance. In my first essay, I analyze a comprehensive sample of defendant firms that found themselves exposed to an unexpected wave of asbestos litigation in the wake of two U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Since these legal liabilities are unrelated to current operations, firms that are in financial distress due to their legal woes provide a natural experiment to study the impact of financial distress on a firm's operational performance. When analyzing firms suffering from this exogenous shock to their finances, I find little evidence of negative spillover effects ("indirect" costs) of financial distress. That is, the competitive position of the distressed firms is not adversely impacted by their weakened financial situation. Furthermore, I find empirical support for a significant disciplinary effect of financial distress as these firms actively restructure and refocus on core operations. In my second and third essays, I focus on the relationship between managerial ownership and firm performance using a large panel dataset of U.S. firms over the period 1988-2004. In the second essay, I reconcile some of the extant literature by showing that the relationship is sensitive to the firm size characteristics of the sample being used. In particular, I recover the classic hump-shaped relationship when focusing only on the largest firms (e.g. Fortune 500 firms), while the relationship turns negative when the sample is comprised of smaller firms. The negative relationship among smaller firms is consistent with entrenchment arguments given that managerial ownership is on average much higher for small firms. Second, I find that for lower levels of managerial ownership, the negative relationship is driven by older firms that have on average less liquid stocks. This finding is consistent with firms that do not perform well enough to create a liquid market for their stock, and hence have to keep high levels of insider ownership in order to avoid a negative price impact that would result from a reduction of their stake. Lastly, these results could also be suggestive of endogeneity concerns. I investigate this issue further in my third essay. Principal-agent models predict that managerial ownership and firm performance are endogenously determined by exogenous changes in a firm's contracting environment. Changes in the contracting environment are, however, only partially observed, and the standard statistical techniques used to address endogeneity may be ineffective in this corporate setting. In my third essay, together with my coauthor Phil Davies, we develop a novel econometric approach to control for the influence of time-varying unobserved variables related to a firm's contracting environment. Using the same large panel dataset of U.S. firms over the period 1988-2004, we find no evidence of a systematic relation between managerial ownership and performance.

Book Essays in Corporate Finance

Download or read book Essays in Corporate Finance written by Kangzhen Xie and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 156 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation studies the effects of information asymmetry, financial constraints and stock market valuation on the behavior of firms. The first essay explores the role of deal initiation and bidder asymmetry in determining the use of auction and target premia in merges and acquisitions. The second essay examines the behavior of the segments of conglomerates and single segment firms in the distressed industries. The third essay investigates the incentive of takeover arising from the temporary disparity of stock valuation. While half of all acquisition targets are sold in negotiated deals with only one buyer rather than by auction, the wealth effects for target shareholders are surprisingly similar in both auctions and negotiations. This begs the following questions: why do companies frequently avoid auctions and instead negotiate with just one buyer, and how can targets achieve comparable premia in negotiations? Drawing on Fishman's (1988) model of preemptive bidding and Povel and Singh's (2006) model of asymmetric bidders, I hypothesize that the sales procedure (i.e., auction or negotiation) is most likely determined by the party that initiates the deal. When an acquirer initiates a deal, it prefers a negotiated deal and hence agrees to pay a high premium to preempt the target and other potential bidders from running an auction. I document detailed information on the private bargaining process for 598 deals. I find that most negotiation deals are in fact initiated by the acquirers and that most of the target-initiated deals use an auction, which indicates that targets are using an auction as a mechanism to discover the highest bidder. Moreover, I provide evidence that the targets receive higher excess returns in the deals initiated by the acquirers than in the deals initiated by the targets. I also provide further evidence of preemptive bidding and bidder asymmetry by studying the indicative bids and the business relations between the targets and the acquirers. Hence, target firms are willing to forgo the potential benefits of an auction and agree to a negotiated deal because they are already facing a bidder with a high valuation and are able to get a high price. The second essay uses economic distress in an industry as a natural experiment and tests the alternate theories of conglomeration. We find that segments of conglomerates in distressed industries experience better performance than single segment firms. The distressed segments have higher sales growth, higher R & D expenditure and greater cash flows than single segment firms. Indicating greater financial constraints for single segment firms, the superior performance of segments of conglomerates is confined to the sub-sample of firms without credit ratings and for firms in competitive industries. Single-segment firms reduce their investment in non-cash current assets and significantly increase their cash holdings during periods of industry distress. There is some evidence that the single segment firms that accumulate cash also reduce their R & D expenditure. The diversification discount almost disappears in the years when one of the conglomerate segments is in distress. Overall, our evidence highlights the benefits of conglomerates in enabling segments to avoid financial constraints during periods of industry distress. The third essay studies the effect of valuation difference on merger incentives. There is widespread evidence that bidders are more highly valued than their targets, and that both parties tend to be in temporarily high-valued industries. We find that valuation differences are also extremely important in predicting who will be acquired and when. Our evidence also suggests that the driving force is more a desire to increase earnings per share the (the "bootstrap game" in the classic text of Brealey and Myers) than to exploit market mis-valuation. We find that a firm is more likely to be a target when others in the industry could acquire them in a stock-swap merger that appears accretive to the buyer while paying the target a substantial premium. The resulting measure is similar to the dispersion of valuation multiples within an industry, but is grounded in a specific model of managerial behavior and is empirically much stronger than dispersion. Indeed, it is stronger than any measure in the existing literature, including recent industry merger activity.

Book Essays on Networks and Corporate Finance

Download or read book Essays on Networks and Corporate Finance written by Tatiana Igorevna Salikhova and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page 296 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In my dissertation I explore how personal networks affect firms' financial decisions. In the first essay, I study how social connections among divisional managers affect the capital allocation to divisions in diversified conglomerates. In contrast to the previous studies, I focus on the horizontal connections or connections formed among managers of the same level of corporate hierarchy. I show that connections among divisional managers lead to higher sensitivity of segment capital spending to segment's growth opportunities, higher firm-level allocation efficiency and higher firm value. Additionally, firms tend to strategically assign better-connected managers to these segments, and connections help to reduce internal information asymmetry. The results are consistent with the idea that connections facilitate interdivisional cooperation and better alignment of divisional and firm's incentives. In the second essay, I examine capital structure decisions of suppliers with social connections to major customers, which invest in relation-specific assets. Suppliers connected to major customers with relation-specific assets have higher debt ratios. The effect is more pronounced when intensity and duration of business relationship is high, and when information asymmetry between parties is high. In addition, building up debt helps suppliers to reduce underleverage and move faster toward target leverage ratios. Overall, the results are consistent with the view that connections help to strengthen implicit contracts through establishing trust between trading parties. In the third essay, I study the effect of divisional manager-CEO social connections on the scale and success of corporate innovation activities. Divisional managers who previously worked or studied with CEO file a greater number of patents during their tenure at the segment. These patents receive more citations in future and represent a greater scientific and economic value. These findings can imply that socials connections help to mitigate adverse selection problems associated with R&D investments.

Book The Art of Taming the Business

Download or read book The Art of Taming the Business written by Vallabhi Ey and published by iUniverse. This book was released on 2009-04 with total page 238 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Business essays for students who want to have a strong foundation in business concepts and for professionals who want to refer back to the basics. The simplified form of complex concepts and simple language makes this book a good and a must read. A Book by a student for both students and professionals! All the business chapters in this book were written as assignments by the author as an MBA (Management of Business Administration) student in University of Northampton in the years 2007 and 2008. There are twelve altogether, some are essays and some are reports. Most of these were written with an intention that these could be published one day. Also the chapters were written with an idea that it should not just reach business readers but also general readers who want to know business or just have an interesting read. The various chapters and the section of Business Management are given below: Chapters 1, 2 and 3 are related to Operations Research Chapters 4 and 5 are related to Marketing Chapter 6 is related to Organizational Strategy Chapter 7 is related to Managing Change Chapter 8 is related to Cross Cultural Management Chapters 9 and 10 are related to People Management Chapter 11 is related to Corporate Finance Chapter 12 is related to Leadership The author believes that diff erent departments in an organization cannot be detached or distinguished without overlaps from other departments. Th ese subjects mentioned above are related to the important characteristics of the concerned subject and would be useful for any department of business as a whole. The conclusion of the last chapter ends with words of Jesus Christ adapted to the business environment.

Book Three Essays on Corporate Finance

Download or read book Three Essays on Corporate Finance written by Haiwei Jing and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page 210 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Chapter 1 hypothesizes that some banks specialize in providing monitoring capital, which includes monitoring services in addition to financial capital, and that such specialization leads them to focus their lending on financially weak firms. I test this hypothesis by constructing a variety of novel measures of banks' monitoring skills and find that financially weak firms are more likely to match with banks that have high monitoring skills and that shocks to firms' financial strength cause them to switch to banks that are a better fit to their new monitoring needs. Chapter 2 investigates how the switching cost, as a result of informational frictions, affects firms' migration behavior. I propose a novel mechanism whereby banks can coordinate with other institutions with which they conduct business; when a relationship bank determines that its firm matching is inefficient, under some conditions, it can transfer the firm to the bank's partner. Using the loan spread residual as a proxy for unobservable credit shocks, I find consistent evidence that a firm with a larger magnitude residual has a higher likelihood of going to a bank that is not a relationship bank but rather a syndicate partner of its relationship bank; and when the spread residual is positively large, the bank partner to which the firm switches tends to put a high stake in the syndicate, which is consistent with its monitoring role for a distressed firm. Chapter 3 proposes that alliances are a channel for merger propagation when partnering firms have complementary resources. I confirm the mechanism's main prediction using US data on corporate alliances and merger activity: The likelihood that a firm will be involved in mergers and acquisition (M\&A) increases significantly if its partners have also engaged in M\&A during the previous two years. My empirical result is not explained by industry-wide M\&A activity or company characteristics. I present three additional empirical results: (i) The propagation effect is stronger when I include proxies for the strength of post-partner-merger resource reallocation, which is consistent with the mechanism, (ii) merger propagation effects are not merely localized but rather diffuse through the alliance network, and (iii) partner mergers also lead to a higher likelihood of entering new alliances.

Book Essays on Behavioral Corporate Finance

Download or read book Essays on Behavioral Corporate Finance written by Mi Shen and published by . This book was released on 2017 with total page 174 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation examines the behavioral traits of business executives that lead to financial misconduct. The first essay investigates whether executives act more honestly when ethical considerations are made to stand out in an obvious way. In behavioral experiments, individuals are less likely to cheat when the saliency of dishonesty is increased (Mazar et al. 2008; Gino et al. 2009). We test this hypothesis in a real world setting by treating news about high-profile political scandals as shocks to the salience of unethical/illegal behavior. Analyzing corporate insiders' stock trading activity, we find evidence of a reduction in inappropriate behavior during these periods. Insiders' stock sales are less profitable and they are less likely to sell stock ahead of large price declines, suggesting less illegal insider trading. The results are concentrated in months with high levels of local media attention to political scandals, supporting an interpretation that the salience of these events affects insiders' behavior. The relation is also stronger when an executives' firm is aligned politically with the accused politician, suggesting that a scandal is more salient to “in-group” executives. However, the behavioral changes appear to be largely transitory and evidence of suspect trading resumes in subsequent years. The second essay examines the effect of envy on executive misbehavior. We provide evidence that envy can lead to executive misbehavior in the form of insider trading. Insiders at underperforming firms headquartered where more other firms are performing well demonstrate greater evidence of informed insider trading. Their stock trades generate higher abnormal returns, and they are more likely to sell stock ahead of a large price decline. We find similar evidence of profitable insider sales when CEOs suffer large pay gaps from their local peers. Envy motivated trading is more apparent in locations where household give less to charities, which may indicate higher levels of greed on average.

Book Financial and Non Financial Determinants of Business Performance  Financial Market and the Real Economy Perspectives

Download or read book Financial and Non Financial Determinants of Business Performance Financial Market and the Real Economy Perspectives written by Piotr Łasak and published by Cognitione Foundation for the Dissemination of Knowledge and Science. This book was released on 2023-11-14 with total page 246 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Running a business today is becoming more complex than two or three decades ago. The world is becoming increasingly open and globalized, and the production processes of goods and provision of services are inscribed in global supply and value-added chains. Large corporations are doing well in such a market, but small and medium-sized enterprises often find it increasingly difficult to function. In addition, apart from the processes exerting pressure on enterprises operating in the real economy, as a result of financial globalization, the scope of financial entities (banks, investment funds, stock exchanges) was also increasing (Knox-Hayes & Wójcik, 2020). However, this is a phase of the past. Currently, not only crossing borders but, above all, far-reaching digitalization and the development of modern technologies set the main direction for the development of enterprises (Florek-Paszkowska et al., 2021). In order to cope with these changes, both individual companies and entire sectors, public administration, and society, as well as national economies, have to make so-called digital transformation (Gajewski et al., 2016). More profound changes are triggered by sustainability, ecology, and human-oriented goals, leading towards industry 5.0. All these processes exert pressure both on big companies as well as on small- and medium-size enterprises. The ongoing changes related to the digitalization process mean not only incorporating modern technologies into existing entities and structures but are much more critical. They are spiritus movens, leading to the transformation of entire sectors of the real economy and the financial markets (Marszk & Lechman, 2021). We can observe the emergence of ecologies and ecosystems (Gancarczyk & Rodil-Marzábal, 2022; Piątkowski & Urbaniec, 2023), mechanisms leading to the development of sharing economies (Szpringer, 2020), as well as the increasing rooting and linking of traditional financial services with services leading to meeting the needs of society. Financial services are embedded in products and become inseparable from these products, and the traditional division into sectors is gradually disappearing. This is possible thanks to the creation of platforms which connect many market participants (Sironi, 2021). In the context of the abovementioned far-reaching processes, many business entities operate according to traditional principles. The key for them are sales, profit and liquidity, which define the crucial financial performance. Among important aspects are also such issues as maintaining the security of business operations and obtaining the desired market indicators in stock companies. For enterprises from developing countries, the basic problem is access to finance, the market, and advanced technologies (Jalil et al., 2022; Łasak, 2022). In developed countries, enterprises also encounter many challenges related to the traditional corporate finance dimension despite a better situation. The current Issue published in the Journal of Entrepreneurship, Management and Innovation (Volume 19, Issue 4, 2023) is aimed at considering the nexus of topics related to the various aspects of the functioning of financial and non-financial enterprises. The main purpose of the articles is to focus on selected problems related to the financial aspects of business activity. The considered problems were presented in the context of contemporary processes taking place in the environment of enterprises. These include, on the one hand, far-reaching digitalization and the use of advanced technologies and, on the other hand, processes belonging to the Environment, Social, and Governance (ESG) area. A description of the situation faced by many enterprises, including financial institutions, undergoing digital transformation is presented in the article written by Łasak and Wyciślak (2023). Digitalization processes not only lead to far-reaching digitization of enterprises and related dilemmas regarding corporate governance but also the transformation of entire sectors of the industry. The banking sector is the best example of this. The question arises what is the pattern of behavior of digital platform partners in the situation of transformation of this sector and platformization of banking services? The paper aims to present the dynamic pattern of behavior among partners stemming from the tensions between governance costs and co-created value within platforms in banking services. The study provides a taxonomy of digital platforms in banking, highlights the values of the most typical platforms, namely blockchain-based and cloud-based platforms, and discusses the potential implications of the platformization of banking services. One of the key contemporary perspectives of business activity is looking through the prism of the need for a responsible and sustainable approach. This is the perspective embodied in the approach referred to by the term ESG. Sustainable business models, considering the ESG principles in the company’s operation, are based on financial and non-financial reasons. The paper written by Zioło, Szaruga, and Spoz (2023) aims to examine the relationship between financial and non-financial factors in enterprises and indicate for which groups of enterprises the relationship of ESG financial performance is most visible in the context of building sustainable business models and the ability to adapt to sustainability. It was found that large enterprises with a solid financial position simultaneously get better non-financial results. In each of the analyzed aspects, large enterprises with an excellent financial standing did better. The conclusion presented by Zioło, Szaruga, and Spoz (2023) does not change the fact that small and medium-sized enterprises play a key role in the economic growth of emerging economies. The paper by Amoa-Gyarteng and Dhliwayo (2023) examines the impact of capital structure and profitability on the short-term solvency of nascent SMSs in Ghana, building on the liability of the newness framework. The study demonstrates that financing decisions and financial performance are crucial mitigating factors for the potential risks of default and failure faced by nascent SMEs. Notably, the study finds that an appropriate balance between debt and equity financing raises the working capital ratio and thus reduces the liability of newness, which is a major challenge faced by nascent SMEs. The analysis also identifies that return on equity (ROE) is a crucial driver of short-term solvency for nascent SMEs. Declining profitability is manifested by a decrease in operating profits and cash flows. The resulting cash flow shortages can cause the company to fall behind on payments and obligations, leading to short-term insolvency, with all the adverse consequences. All these conclusions might be valuable for enterprises in other developing countries. Operational and financial market performance is a crucial determinant not only for SMEs but also for larger companies. Such type of businesses is presented in the paper by Yaşar and Gerede (2023). The article shows how complex are the processes accompanying the functioning of such enterprises as airlines. This paper refers to the competitiveness of such airline companies and the conditions determining their favorable market position and long-term competitive advantage. The market position of such companies is influenced by such factors like firm maturity, its size, financial resources and some technical dimensions (number of flights, fleet homogeneity). This means that despite the processes taking place today, the business performance of such entities as airlines still depends on the classic factors described in the literature of corporate finance. The contemporary opportunities resulting from the dynamic development of information technology contribute to the development of new forms of financing business activity. One such form is crowdfunding. The paper by Nose and Hosomi (2023) is dedicated to the equity crowdfunding (ECF) issue in the Japanese context. The research provides an answer to the question of what makes equity crowdfunding successful. The “Signaling Hypothesis” and “Lack of Financial Literacy Hypothesis” were tested. Despite the research is focusing more on investors’ side, it also sends an important signal to the business considering crowdfunding as a source of funding. The conclusions can be helpful for start-ups planning ECF campaigns in the future. The company’s position on the market may also depend on factors other than financial performance, and recently, it has depended to an increasing extent on environmental, social, and governance performance (defining corporate sustainability performance). In this context very important research thread is the relationship between corporate sustainability performance and stability of dividend payouts. This topic is presented in the paper by Matuszewska-Pierzynka, Mrzygłód, and Pieloch-Babiarz (2023). The research verifies many detailed interdependencies between the ESG performance of an enterprise and the propensity to pay stable dividends to the enterprise. The possibility of financing business activity is determined by the situation in the banking sector. The conditions of financing provided by banks are of particular importance in the case of developing countries, where other forms of raising capital by enterprises are often limited. Shaikh, Tunio, and Dagar (2023) paper discusses the relationship between banks funding liquidity, capital funds and bankers’ lending activity in emerging markets. This research firstly provides insight into the activity of financial companies in emerging markets, and secondly, informs the public, and especially the business, about the lending practices of the banking sector, and in consequence, on the financing opportunities in these economies. These unique studies presented in this Issue enrich our knowledge about contemporary business activity. The papers contribute to understanding the nature of business performance and link corporate finance issues with other, mainly technological and social aspects. Particular attention, however, is paid to the traditional conditions of operation and financing of enterprises. At the same time, however, efforts were made to combine new business conditions, including digitization. The issues raised also concern processes ensuring sustainable development. We want to express the hope that the papers presented here will be of interest to readers, scholars, and researchers worldwide. They provide theoretical concepts, and quantitative analyses, and indicate pathways for further research. Many of the presented areas require further, in-depth analysis.

Book Future Outlooks on Corporate Finance and Opportunities for Robust Economic Planning

Download or read book Future Outlooks on Corporate Finance and Opportunities for Robust Economic Planning written by Kunjumuhammed, Siraj Kariyilaparambu and published by IGI Global. This book was released on 2023-02-20 with total page 297 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Corporate finance decisions showcase the responses of corporations to address challenges on both the demand and supply sides and the firm value chain. Corporate performance, strategies, and priorities have changed significantly since the pandemic. Understanding these changes and developing and implementing policy responses are crucial to success. Future Outlooks on Corporate Finance and Opportunities for Robust Economic Planning disseminates knowledge regarding corporate response during crises that contribute to a robust economic planning process. It examines the adjustments and strategic interventions that helped corporations mitigate challenges successfully. Covering topics such as corporate governance practices, global systemic risk interdependencies, and investment decisions, this premier reference source is an excellent resource for finance professionals, business executives and managers, financial officers, students and faculty of higher education, librarians, researchers, and academicians.

Book Essays in Corporate Governance  Corporate Finance and Control

Download or read book Essays in Corporate Governance Corporate Finance and Control written by Daniel Christian Powell and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Issues in Finance and Industry

Download or read book Issues in Finance and Industry written by Ajit Singh and published by Palgrave MacMillan. This book was released on 2008-11-03 with total page 316 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: With contributions from a wide range of experts, this volume presents an overview of contemporary issues in the financial and industrial sectors. This book is an essential read for all scholars and policymakers interested in the current issues facing finance and industry, as well as those who have followed Ajit Singh's life and works.

Book Handbook of Corporate Finance

Download or read book Handbook of Corporate Finance written by Bjørn Espen Eckbo and published by Elsevier. This book was released on 2007-05-21 with total page 559 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Judging by the sheer number of papers reviewed in this Handbook, the empirical analysis of firms’ financing and investment decisions—empirical corporate finance—has become a dominant field in financial economics. The growing interest in everything “corporate is fueled by a healthy combination of fundamental theoretical developments and recent widespread access to large transactional data bases. A less scientific—but nevertheless important—source of inspiration is a growing awareness of the important social implications of corporate behavior and governance. This Handbook takes stock of the main empirical findings to date across an unprecedented spectrum of corporate finance issues, ranging from econometric methodology, to raising capital and capital structure choice, and to managerial incentives and corporate investment behavior. The surveys are written by leading empirical researchers that remain active in their respective areas of interest. With few exceptions, the writing style makes the chapters accessible to industry practitioners. For doctoral students and seasoned academics, the surveys offer dense roadmaps into the empirical research landscape and provide suggestions for future work. *The Handbooks in Finance series offers a broad group of outstanding volumes in various areas of finance *Each individual volume in the series should present an accurate self-contained survey of a sub-field of finance *The series is international in scope with contributions from field leaders the world over

Book Essays on Corruption and Corporate Finance

Download or read book Essays on Corruption and Corporate Finance written by Taek-yul Kim and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 172 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The essays in my dissertation investigate how political corruption affects business decisions made by firms. In the first essay (co-authored with Jacqueline Garner and Adam Yore), we study how do firms respond when operating within a corrupt environment. To answer this question, we analyzes the interaction between the degree of local political corruption, lobbying expenditures, corporate investment, the cost of capital, and firm value. Using a sample of almost 11,000 firm year observations over a 12 year time period, we provide evidence that firms operating in corrupt political environments spend greater dollars on lobbying which helps secure safer cash flows. Consistent with a securing safer returns argument, these lobbying-intensive firms have less volatile cash flows and stock returns. They also exhibit lower costs of equity and an overall lower weighted average cost of capital. However, these benefits come at a cost: lobbying firms are associated with a reduction in spending on traditional investment such as research and development and capital expenditures. Overall, our evidence suggests that the misallocation of resources by firms operating in corrupt environments results in lower firm value, as measured by Tobin's q. The second essay (co-authored with David Becher and Jacqueline Garner) examines the relationship between U.S. firms' local area corruption and their acquisition decisions during the period of 1997-2009. While previous studies have shown that the corruption in the target's local area affects the completion and premiums paid, we find that these results are significantly dependent on the corruption of the acquirer's local area as well. When targets and acquirers are both from a corrupt area, completion rates are higher, while premiums and target returns are lower. These findings are consistent with our familiarity and bargaining hypothesis. Yet, acquirer shareholders benefit overall. We also find that firms will employ lobbying activities to influence merger outcomes in their favor. Lobbying activities by targets result in fewer completed deals, while lobbying activities by acquirers increase the probability of completion. We also observe that lobbying activities by both parties are related to longer completion times, and acquirer lobbying results in higher premiums, suggesting that lobbying is used with hard to complete deals. These results are not explained by location or industry. The evidence suggests that acquirers which have dealt with corrupt environments previously are able to overcome the costs related to the target's corrupt environment.

Book Theory and Reality in Financial Economics

Download or read book Theory and Reality in Financial Economics written by George M. Frankfurter and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2007 with total page 238 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The current literature on financial economics is dominated by neoclassical dogma and, supposedly, the notion of value-neutrality. However, the failure of neoclassical economics to deal with real financial phenomena suggests that this might be too simplistic of an approach. This book consists of a collection of essays dealing with financial markets'' imperfections, and the inability of neoclassical economics to deal with such imperfections. Its central argument is that financial economics, as based on the tenets of neoclassical economics, cannot answer or solve the real-life problems that people face. It also shows the direct relationship between economics and politics OCo something that is usually denied in academic models, given that science is supposed to be value-neutral. In this thought-provoking and avant-garde book, the author not only exposes what has gone wrong, but also suggests reforms to both the academic and the political-economic systems that might help make markets fair rather than efficient. Drawing on interdisciplinary fields, this book will appeal to readers who are interested in finance, economics, business, the political economy and philosophy. Sample Chapter(s). Foreword (37 KB). Chapter 1: Method and Methodology (146 KB). Contents: Method and Methodology; What is All Efficiency?; Still Autistic Finance; The Young Finance Faculty''s Guide to Publishing; Prolific Authors in Finance; For-Profit Education: An Idea That Should be Put to Rest?; Weep Not for Microsoft: Monopoly''s Fatal Exception; The Socio-Economics of Scandals; Desperately Seeking Toto; And Now for Something Entirely Different; After the Ball; Capitalism or Industrial Fiefdom; The Theory of Fair Markets (TFM): Toward a New Finance Paradigm. Readership: Graduate students of finance; students of economics, economic methodology and philosophy of science."

Book Accounting  Organizations  and Institutions

Download or read book Accounting Organizations and Institutions written by Christopher S. Chapman and published by Oxford University Press. This book was released on 2009-08-13 with total page 458 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Brings together the work of leading international accounting academics and social scientists. Explores a range of intellectual traditions in accounting research, and their implications for the social sciences more widely.

Book Research Papers  Taxes

Download or read book Research Papers Taxes written by Commission on Private Philanthropy and Public Needs and published by . This book was released on 1977 with total page 738 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Three Essays on Corporate Finance and Firm Dynamics

Download or read book Three Essays on Corporate Finance and Firm Dynamics written by Atsuko Izumi and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page 97 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "Change in corporate performance after firing CEO: A comparison between US and Japan" The relation between board independence and management monitoring intensity is a long-standing question in the literature. Employing firm performance after CEO dismissals, this paper investigates whether independent boards solve the managerial entrenchment problem more effectively. Shleifer and Vishny (1989) demonstrate the incentive of CEOs to make irreversible skill-specific investments to increase the cost of replacing them under weak monitoring. I extend their model, generating an expected decline in firm performance when an entrenched CEO is fired. I track firm performance after CEO forced turnover events between 2000 and 2007 in the US and Japan, where the independence of boards differs distinctively. I find evidence that firm performance improves after a forced CEO turnover in the US, but not in Japan, where the insider-dominant boards monitor the CEO. The performance improvement in the US is accompanied by substantial consolidations; US firms reduce their assets and their labor force by a magnitude of 6 to 8 times more than Japanese firms. In addition, I demonstrate that forced CEO turnover is not followed by performance improvement in US firms with less independent boards. Overall, the evidence suggests that CEOs are more entrenched under the weak monitoring of less independent boards. "Market response to CEO turnover announcement for dismissal events" This paper investigates stock returns to CEO turnover announcements for CEO dismissal cases in US and Japan. A stock price response to CEO turnover announcement potentially captures the impacts of CEO turnover on overall firm performance. Using CEO forced turnover events that were announced between 2000 and 2007 in public companies of US and Japan, I find that the capital market responds to CEO succession news positively, but stock returns are statistically insignificant in both countries. Furthermore, the results indicate that CEO turnover announcement is followed by economically and statistically significant positive abnormal returns when independent board monitors top management. A greater market response to CEO turnover announcement for the external succession is observed in US, but not in Japan. "Do firms change investment behavior before and after financial crisis?" Aftermath of financial crisis, slow recovery in private business investment is one primary concern of policy makers. This paper investigates the change in firms' investment behavior before and after the financial crisis using 15-year quarterly financial data of 895 large firms in five advanced economies. I find a significantly positive relation between firm profitability and capital expenditure during the sample period from 1999 to 2014: firms increase 1% of capital expenditure to total asset ratio for 1% rise in ROA on average, which is consistent with findings in preceding studies (Fazzari et al., 1998; Kaplan & Zingales, 1997). However, the correlation between capital expenditure and cash flow disappears after the financial crisis. On the other hand, a linkage between R&D expenditure and cash flow emerges to be significantly positive. These results indicate the shift in corporate investment objective from tangible to intangible assets after the crisis.