Search results for " asset"

showing 10 items of 187 documents

Another Look on Choosing Factors: The International Evidence

2019

Extending Fama and French’s (2018) U.S. study on choosing factors to international equity markets, we test nested and non-nested asset pricing models for North America, Europe, Asia excluding Japan, and Japan. For non-nested models, we propose a new simulation methodology using a blocks bootstrap approach that takes into account factor dependencies. The resultant out-of-sample Sharpe ratios across all models and countries are lower than Fama and French’s pairs bootstrap approach. While we confirm that the six-factor model with market, size, and small size spread factors for value, profit, investment, and momentum produces the highest maximum squared Sharpe ratio in most economies, an except…

Sharpe ratioEquity (finance)EconometricsEconomicsCapital asset pricing modelProfit (economics)SSRN Electronic Journal
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The Up-Cycle Beyond the Crime: The Productive Re-Activation of Confiscated Criminal Assets

La ricerca “The Up-Cycle Beyond the Crime: the Productive Re-Activation of Confiscated Criminal Assets” affronta il tema del reinserimento dei beni confiscati alla organizzazioni criminali in nuovi cicli di vita produttivi. La tesi è sviluppata attraverso tre parti principali. La prima parte è dedicata all’inquadramento scientifico del tema e all’apparato teorico, proponendo un regesto critico delle teorie e dell’evoluzione del concetto di riciclo della città e del territorio, con particolare attenzione alla modalità dell’up-cycle, attingendo sia alla letteratura delle scienze sociali, geografiche ed economiche sia alle pratiche relative alla riattivazione dei metabolismi territoriali. La s…

Social ReuseRiuso SocialeUrban MetabolismConfiscated Criminal AssetsBeni ConfiscatiUpcycleRecycleSettore ICAR/21 - UrbanisticaUrban DesignUrban Planning
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WORKING CAPITAL AS AN ENTERPRISE VALUE ASSESSMENT TOOL

2019

The valuation of an entity in off-exchange transactions involves the use of different techniques. Nevertheless, none of them guarantees the most accurate result. Therefore, it is very difficult to choose one evaluation method. Both investors, corporate managers, financial professionals, portfolio managers, and securities analysts should have a basic understanding of the process of evaluating companies. To that end, professionals recommend evaluating a company’s financial reports to detect its financial position and solvency. According to the methods of financial analysis, working capital is one of the solvency ratios, which describes the value of resources that remain after the company’s cu…

SolvencyCurrent liabilitybusiness.industryWorking capitalEnterprise valueFinancial analysisPosition (finance)PortfolioAccountingcurrent assets current liabilities evaluation methods working capitalbusinessValuation (finance)SOCIETY. INTEGRATION. EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference
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Board Gender Diversity and Firm Performance: Evidence from Supply-Side Shocks in China

2019

This paper identifies a positive causal effect of board gender diversity on firm performance by utilizing unique historical events in China. Specifically, the Famine resulted in an evident gender gap in the supply of qualified directors of certain cohorts. Since the shocks differ in both gender and cohorts, we construct a novel "Diff-in-Diff'" instrumental variable and a Bartik instrument for board gender representation. We find that a 10% increase in board female representation can lead to a 2.38% increase in return on assets (ROA). Moreover, our results support the critical mass theory and indicate that female directors are beneficial by lowering risk levels and improving solvency.

SolvencyReturn on assetsGender diversityInstrumental variableFamineDemographic economicsChinaConstruct (philosophy)Representation (politics)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Growth in Average Firm Size of U.S. Industrial Portfolios and the Cross-Section of Expected Returns

2018

This paper shows that growth in average firm size in U.S. industrial portfolios predicts future growth in average firm size. Moreover, the payoffs of industrial portfolios sorted by growth in average firm size in the previous period increase linearly as we move from lowest to highest growth in average firm size. The spread between highest and lowest growth in average firm size is economically large and cannot be explained by exposures to standard risk factors or the asset growth effect (Cooper, Gulen, and Schill, 2008). Principal component analysis reveals that this growth in average firm size effect is linked to the first principal component. Moreover, stochastic discount factor model anal…

Standard RiskStochastic discount factorPrincipal component analysisEconomicsEconometricsCapital asset pricing modelRisk factor (finance)Asset (economics)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Networks of equities in financial markets

2004

We review the recent approach of correlation based networks of financial equities. We investigate portfolio of stocks at different time horizons, financial indices and volatility time series and we show that meaningful economic information can be extracted from noise dressed correlation matrices. We show that the method can be used to falsify widespread market models by directly comparing the topological properties of networks of real and artificial markets.

Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Financial marketINDEXESFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCondensed Matter PhysicsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsSettore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli e Metodi MatematiciFOS: Economics and businessEconomic informationDYNAMIC ASSET TREESEconometricsEconomicsPortfolioVolatility (finance)INTERNETVOLATILITYCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Jump-diffusion models of German stock returns

1991

This paper discusses the statistical properties of jump-diffusion processes and reports on parameter estimates for the DAX stock index and 48 German stocks with traded options. It is found that a Poisson-type jump-diffusion process can explain the high levels of kurtosis and skewness of observed return distributions of German stocks. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the return dynamics of the DAX include a statistically significant jump component except for a few sample subperiods. This finding is seen to be inconsistent with asset pricing models assuming that the jump component of the stock's return is unsystematic and diversifiable in the market portfolio.

Statistics and ProbabilityActuarial scienceMarket portfolioJump diffusionStock market indexComputer Science::Computational Engineering Finance and ScienceSkewnessEconomicsKurtosisJumpEconometricsCapital asset pricing modelStatistics Probability and UncertaintyStock (geology)Statistical Papers
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Calibration of optimal execution of financial transactions in the presence of transient market impact

2012

Trading large volumes of a financial asset in order driven markets requires the use of algorithmic execution dividing the volume in many transactions in order to minimize costs due to market impact. A proper design of an optimal execution strategy strongly depends on a careful modeling of market impact, i.e. how the price reacts to trades. In this paper we consider a recently introduced market impact model (Bouchaud et al., 2004), which has the property of describing both the volume and the temporal dependence of price change due to trading. We show how this model can be used to describe price impact also in aggregated trade time or in real time. We then solve analytically and calibrate wit…

Statistics and ProbabilityMathematical optimizationQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Financial market Econophysics stochastic processesFinancial assetComputer scienceVolume (computing)Efficient frontierQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsRisk neutralTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businessOrder (exchange)Financial transactionfinancial instruments and regulation models of financial markets risk measure and managementTransient (computer programming)Statistics Probability and UncertaintyMarket impact
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Can fiscal policy stimulus boost economic recovery

2011

We assess the role played by fiscal policy in explaining the dynamics of asset markets. Using a panel of ten industrialized countries, we show that a positive fiscal shock has a negative impact in both stock and housing prices. However, while stock prices immediately adjust to the shock and the effect of fiscal policy is temporary, housing prices gradually and persistently fall. Consequently, the attempts of fiscal policy to mitigate stock price developments (e.g. via taxes on capital gains) may severely de-stabilize housing markets. The empirical findings also point to significant fiscal multiplier effects in the context of severe housing busts, which gives rise to the importance of the im…

Stimulus (economics)jel:E62Fiscal policy asset prices panel VARSocial SciencesMonetary economics0502 economics and businessEconomicsH30Price levelReal interest rate050207 economics050205 econometrics 050208 financeWelfare economics05 social sciencesFiscal multiplier1. No povertySettore SECS-P/02 Politica Economicajel:H30Investment (macroeconomics)Fiscal policyShock (economics)Deficit spending8. Economic growthEconomic recoveryE62Fiscal policy asset prices panel VAR.General Economics Econometrics and Finance
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Firm Size and Volatility Analysis in the Spanish Stock Market

2011

In this article, three strongly related questions are studied. First, volatility spillovers between large and small firms in the Spanish stock market are analyzed by using a conditional CAPM with an asymmetric multivariate GARCH-M covariance structure. Results show that there exist bidirectional volatility spillovers between both types of firms, especially after bad news. Second, the volatility feedback hypothesis explaining the volatility asymmetry feature is investigated. Results show significant evidence for this hypothesis. Finally, the study uncovers that conditional beta coefficient estimates within the used model are insensitive to sign and size asymmetries in the unexpected shock re…

Stochastic volatilityFinancial economicsRisk premiumAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)CovarianceImplied volatilityVolatility risk premiumMultivariate garchPrice of riskVolatility swapEconomicsEconometricsForward volatilityVolatility smileCapital asset pricing modelStock marketVolatility (finance)SSRN Electronic Journal
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