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Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10003303631
We perform an experiment where subjects pay for the right to participate in a shareholder vote. We find that experimental subjects are willing to pay a significant premium for the voting right even though there should be no such premium in our setup under full rationality. Private benefits from...
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Voting and non-voting shares of ten German companies are analyzed for fractional cointegration. It turns out that seven pairs of price series are fractionally cointegrated, which means that for each pair there is a linear combination of the two series that is a long-memory process. If two stocks...
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This note provides a proof of Granger's (1986) error correction model for fractionally cointegrated variables and points out a necessary assumption that has not been noted before. Moreover, a simpler, alternative error correction model is proposed which can be employed to estimate fractionally...
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This paper reports on an extensive Monte Carlo study of seven residual-based tests of the hypothesis of no cointegration. Critical values and the power of the tests under the alternative of fractional cointegration are simulated and compared. It turns out that the Phillips-Perron t-test when...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010467702
This paper shows that open market block trading can provide a link between private benefits of control enjoyed by large shareholders and the "voting premiumʺ, i.e. the price difference between voting and non-voting shares. We first demonstrate in a microstructure model with informed traders and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10003024138
We document the importance of the choice of error measure (percentage vs. logarithmic errors) for the comparison of alternative valuation procedures. We demonstrate for several multiple valuation methods (averaging with the arithmetic mean, harmonic mean, median, geometric mean) that the ranking...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005451000