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We hypothesize that poor country-level governance, which makes public information less reliable, induces fund managers to increase their use of semi-public information. Utilizing data from international mutual funds and stocks over the 2000-2009 period, we find that semi-public...
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We study how information flows within international financial conglomerates and how such a flow reduces the transmission of liquidity crisis due to fire-sales. We focus on the role of international institutional investors affiliated with banks during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis. We...
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We investigate how short sellers strategically exploit the liquidity generated by the arrival of ambiguous information – i.e. information likely to cause disagreement in interpretation. Using a sample of newspaper articles, media newswires, and press releases, we construct a measure of...
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We hypothesize that poor country-level governance, which makes public information less reliable, induces fund managers to increase their use of semi-public information. Utilizing data from international mutual funds and stocks over the 2000-2009 period, we find that semi-public...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013067539
We study how information about one firm transmits to otherwise unrelated firms sharing the same major blockholder. Using information on US firms over the 2001–2008 period, we show that the financial conditions of these firms signal the controlling ability of the owner and therefore indirectly...
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