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To protect investors, securities regulation generally restrains entrepreneurial ventures from entering the stock market. Scholars and regulators contend that strong rules and requirements for listing are essential to prevent the market from failing. However, these constraints can also unduly...
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This chapter describes and analyzes how a stock exchange can be used to finance emerging companies and to assume the role usually played by private VCs. We find that the Canadian public VC market has a success rate which is approximately four times the corresponding rate for private VC. The...
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This paper provides the first large-scale analysis of the economic effect of allowing small emerging firms to access the stock market. We analyze the survival and success of Canadian newly listed companies based on an original sample of 2,373 issues from 1986 to 2003, composed essentially (86%)...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012755280
We analyze the economic consequences of disclosure and regulation within a context of significant information asymmetry and lenient regulation. In Canada, firms can enter the stock market at a pre-revenue stage by fulfilling each of the requirements of an initial public offerings or using...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012715405
We analyze the long-run performance of the population of Canadian firms that cross-list in the US between 1990 and 2005, paying particular attention to cross-delisting companies. We ask why, since numerous firms cross-list to get the advantages associated with cross-listing, these firms'...
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