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We examine the impact of initial public offerings (IPOs) on rival firms and find that the valuation effects are insignificant. This insignificant reaction can be explained by offsetting information and competitive effects. Significant positive information effects are associated with IPOs in...
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Finance journal quality is a critical issue for faculty annual evaluations, for the tenure and promotion process, and for the administration of faculty workload plans. Unlike other studies that use objective measures(such as citation frequencies) to rate journals, this study focuses on the...
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The purpose of this study is to determine what firm-specific factors affect the risk of insurance companies. Traditional methods used to identify potential failures have been severely criticized. Thus, alternative approaches to risk assessment should be of interst to investors and managers of...
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This study examines the market's reaction to foreign divestitures and explains why reactions vary across firms. A significant positive reaction is observed, which is similar in magniture to that observed for a matched control sample of domestic divestitures. The size of the reaction is...
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Insurance company risk is assessed after their acquisitions. An acquisition may increase risk if it is a strategic mismatch, or an acquisition may reduce risk through cash flow diversification. Over thirty-six month periods surrounding insurance company acquisitions, systematic risk changes are...
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Given their unique characteristics, insurers that adjust their dividends may create a unique signal. An event study methodology is used to measure the share price response of insurers to dividend increases, and matched control samples of banks and industrial firms are similarly assessed. The...
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