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While Diether, Lee, and Werner (2009) find that daily shorting activity is serially correlated, this study uses more formal tests and finds significant first-order autocorrelation in daily short volume. Contrary to prior research that suggests that autocorrelation in total trade volume is...
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This study finds evidence of autocorrelation in daily short-sale volume. The degree of autocorrelation in short volume, however, is not driven by illiquid stocks or stocks that face short-sale constraints. Contrary to prior research that suggests that autocorrelation in total trade volume is...
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Informed investors have been shown to break up their larger trades into smaller trades in order to disguise their information. This study considers informed trading strategies when investors face borrowing constraints. Borrowing constraints may induce more intense trading and increase the use of...
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Recent research has emphasized the impact of transaction costs on firm leverage adjustments. We recognize that cashflow realizations can provide opportunities to adjust leverage at relatively low marginal cost. We find that a firm's cashflow features affect not only the leverage target, but also...
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Market effects on corporate investment are well documented. Low disagreement implies high investment, but we know little about what high disagreement implies, other than the implied flip side (low investment). This paper adds to this literature in several ways. A new dimension of corporate...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012711768