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Booth and Chua (1996) suggest that underpricing may boost secondary market liquidity of an initial public offering (IPO), but to date there is little evidence on this point. In this study, we employ ten measures of liquidity to explore whether the underpricing of IPOs boosts subsequent secondary...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012732920
Empirical research has shown that hospitals have higher than average leverage, the extent of leverage is related to the extent of cost-based reimbursement, and not-for-profit hospitals are not as highly levered as their for-profit counterparts. Previous theoretical work does not unambiguously...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012775443
Standard models of adverse selection in insurance markets assume policyholders know their loss distributions. This study examines the nature of equilibrium and the equilibrium value of information in competitive insurance markets where consumers lack complete information regarding their loss...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012775448
This study considers a single-period monopolistic insurance market with adverse selection and moral hazard. We find that, where the distortions introduced by moral hazard are sufficiently moderate, the insurer can use price-quantity contracts as a mechanism to simultaneously deal with both...
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Monday IPOs occur infrequently and have higher mean initial returns than those issued on other days. The latter result is not a product of outliers or penny stocks and remains after controlling for factors related to IPO underpricing. The Monday effect is generally robust across time, but during...
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