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Financial markets provide for trade in information because money is just a means of scorekeeping, a way of tallying the relative purchasing power of individuals and organizations. It can be a physical tally such as a coin made from rare metals or a paper claim on a government or other reputable...
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By 1999, close to 80% of non-U.S. IPOs were marketed using bookbuilding methods. We study whether the recent introduction of this technology by U.S. banks and their inclusion in non-U.S. IPO syndicates has promoted efficiency in primary equity markets. We analyze both direct and indirect costs...
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This dissertation has three chapters. Each chapter focus on separate issues in corporate finance. The first chapter studies how information production is allocated between buy-side and sell-side firms when identical information-producing agents can choose to be either sell-side analysts or...
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