Search results for " pricing"

showing 10 items of 146 documents

Is the price of water for residential use related to provider ownership? Empirical evidence from Spain

2013

Abstract This paper assesses the relationship between provider ownership and the price of water for residential use set by 386 Southern Spanish municipalities. Our main contribution to the previous literature is that we go much further than merely distinguishing between private and public ownership. First, we find that prices are lower when the urban water service is directly provided by town councils. Second, when water services are contracted out to external companies, the prices set by public utilities are higher than the prices of private utilities due to larger fixed quotas. Finally, water prices are also higher when the provision of the service has been privatised to an institutionali…

FinanceSociology and Political SciencePublic ownershipbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectWater industryManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopmentWater pricingGeneral partnershipService (economics)EconomicsBusiness and International ManagementbusinessUrban waterEmpirical evidencemedia_commonUtilities Policy
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Exchange Rate and Inflation Risk Premia in the UME

2012

This paper tests the effects of exchange rate and inflation risk factors on asset pricing in the European Union (EU) stock markets. This investigation is motivated by the results of Vassalou (2000) [Journal of International Money and Finance, 19, 433-70] showing that both exchange rate and foreign inflation are generally priced in equity returns, and the opportunity to evaluate the causality between these sources of risk after the elimination of the EU currency risks because of the adoption of the single currency. Our results show that both exchange rate and inflation risks are significantly priced in the pre- and post-euro periods. Moreover, the size of exchange rate and inflation risk pre…

Financial economicsRisk premiumMonetary policyRisk-free interest rateFinancial risk managementMonetary economicsEconomiaExchange ratePreusEconomicsCapital asset pricing modelReal interest rateForeign exchange riskGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinance
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Investigation of design strategies and quantification of energy flexibility in buildings: A case-study in southern Italy

2021

Abstract The need for nearly (net) zero energy buildings in the current European landscape does not merely refer to energy balances: the aim to investigate the interaction between generation and load and find sources of technical-economic energy efficiency is marking the rise in interest throughout research and practice of energy flexibility solutions in buildings. In this regard, the study aims at enhancing the energy flexibility of a building in southern Italy through Rule-Based Control algorithms for the control of the space heating system and the charge and discharge of an electricity storage. The influence of electricity pricing and the thermal comfort conditions on flexibility is also…

Flexibility (engineering)Zero-energy buildingComputer scienceElectricity pricing0211 other engineering and technologiesBuilding model02 engineering and technologyBuilding and ConstructionTRNSYSEnvironmental economicsBuilding designEnergy storageEnergy flexible buildings Energy flexibility Rule based control Key performance indicatorsMechanics of Materials021105 building & constructionArchitecture021108 energySafety Risk Reliability and QualityCivil and Structural EngineeringEfficient energy useJournal of Building Engineering
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Spatial econometrics and the hedonic pricing model: what about the temporal dimension

2014

Recent ready access to free software and toolbox applications is directly impacting spatial econometric modelling when working with geolocated data. Spatial econometric models are valuable tools for taking into account the possible latent structure of the price determination process and ensuring that the coefficients estimated are unbiased and efficient. However, mechanical applications can potentially bias estimated coefficients if spatial data is pooled over time because the applications consider the spatial dimension alone. Spatial models neglect the fact that data (e.g. real estate) may consist of a collection of spatial data pooled over time, and that time relations generate a unidirec…

Geography Planning and DevelopmentReal estate[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceUrban StudiesSpatial relationEconometric modelEmpirical researchAutoregressive modelStatisticsEconometricsEconomics[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesSpatial econometricsDimension (data warehouse)Spatial econometrics[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSpatial analysisComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUShedonic pricing
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Predicting bond betas using macro-finance variables

2019

We conduct in-sample and out-of-sample forecasting using the new approach of combining explanatory variables through complete subset regressions (CSR). We predict bond CAPM betas and bond returns conditioning on various macro-finance variables. We explore differences across long-term government bonds, investment grade corporate bonds, and high-yield corporate bonds. The CSR method performs well in predicting bond betas, especially in-sample, and, mainly high-yield bond betas when the focus is out-of-sample. Bond returns are less predictable than bond betas.

Government bondsYield (finance)Complete subset regressionsPredictor variablesModel confidence set0502 economics and businessEconometricsEconomicsCapital asset pricing model050207 economicsMacroRobustness (economics)FinanceBond betas Complete subset regressionsCorporate bondsGovernment bondsMacro-finance variablesModel confidence set050208 financebusiness.industryBond05 social sciencesInvestment (macroeconomics)Macro-finance variablesBond market indexGovernment (linguistics)Corporate social responsibilityBond betasBusinessCorporate bondsFinance
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Minimal Dynamic Equilibria

2018

We define dynamic models as multiperiod models with no static representations and demonstrate that current prevalent asset pricing empirical implementations are inconsistent with dynamic equilibria. Specifically, empirical implementations are misspecified with respect to three essential asset pricing questions (TEQ): dependency on higher moments, complexity of risk premia, and mean-variance efficiency of the “market portfolio” (ability to proxy pricing kernels/SDFs). While we already know that “Merton” models, and their derivatives, differ from static models in all TEQ, we show that this is the case even the “minimal” dynamic equilibria.

HistoryDependency (UML)Polymers and PlasticsMarket portfolioComputer scienceRisk premiumIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringDynamic modelsStochastic discount factorEconometricsCapital asset pricing modelBusiness and International ManagementProxy (statistics)ImplementationSSRN Electronic Journal
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Pricing and hedging GDP-linked bonds in incomplete markets

2018

Abstract We model the super-replication of payoffs linked to a country’s GDP as a stochastic linear program on a discrete time and state-space scenario tree to price GDP-linked bonds. As a byproduct of the model we obtain a hedging portfolio. Using linear programming duality we compute also the risk premium. The model applies to coupon-indexed and principal-indexed bonds, and allows the analysis of bonds with different design parameters (coupon, target GDP growth rate, and maturity). We calibrate for UK and US instruments, and carry out sensitivity analysis of prices and risk premia to the risk factors and bond design parameters. We also compare coupon-indexed and principal-indexed bonds. F…

Incomplete marketEconomics and EconometricsHistoryControl and OptimizationPolymers and PlasticsFinancial economicsContingent bonds; Debt restructuring;Asset pricing; Incomplete markets; Risk premium; Stochastic programming; Super-replicationRisk premiumStochastic programmingDebt restructuringIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Incomplete markets0502 economics and businessEconometricsEconomicsCapital asset pricing model050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementSuper-replicationContingent bond050208 financeApplied MathematicsBond05 social sciencesRisk premiumAsset pricingBond market indexMaturity (finance)Stochastic programmingRisk-free bond8. Economic growthPortfolioCoupon
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Pricing and Hedging GDP-Linked Bonds in Incomplete Markets

2017

We model the super-replication of payoffs linked to a country's GDP as a stochastic linear program on a discrete time and state-space scenario tree to price GDP-linked bonds. As a byproduct of the model, we obtain a hedging portfolio. Using linear programming duality we also compute the risk premium. The model applies to coupon-indexed and principal-indexed bonds, and allows the analysis of bonds with different design parameters (coupon, target GDP growth rate, and maturity). We calibrate for UK and US instruments and carry out a sensitivity analysis of prices and risk premia to the risk factors and bond design parameters. We also compare coupon-indexed and principal-indexed bonds. Results …

Incomplete marketsRisk premiumStochastic programmingDebt restructuringAsset pricingSuper-replicationContingent bonds
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On survivor stocks in the S&P 500 stock index

2021

This paper investigates the performance and characteristics of survivor stocks in the S&P 500 index. Using both in-sample and out-of-sample comparisons, survivor stocks outperformed this market index by a considerable margin. Relative to other S&P 500 index companies, survivor stocks tend to be small value stocks that exhibit high profitability and invest conservatively. Surprisingly, survivor stocks tend to be loser stocks with negative exposure to the momentum factor. Further analyses show that the volatility of the survivor stocks portfolio is less exposed to tail risks and responds less to shocks in the innovation process.

Index (economics)social sciencesStock market indexhumanitiesMomentum (finance)Margin (finance)EconometricsEconomicspopulation characteristicsCapital asset pricing modelPortfolioProfitability indexVolatility (finance)human activitieshealth care economics and organizationsSSRN Electronic Journal
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The role of the distribution platform in price formation of paid apps

2015

In this paper we study the role of the distribution platform as an important determinant of price of paid apps. We also examine how the distribution platform influences the price implications of important developers' app-level decisions. To these purposes, we construct a hierarchical model of price formation by using an ad-hoc panel dataset consisting of top paid apps from the two major app stores, namely Apple's App Store and Google Play. Our findings show that prices of paid apps strongly depend on the platform where the apps are marketed. Specifically, the App Store is associated with lower prices for paid apps than Google Play. We find evidence that this is because the impact of cross-s…

Information Systems and ManagementGeneralLiterature_INTRODUCTORYANDSURVEYElectronic commerceDistribution (economics)App storeGeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUSManagement Information SystemsCompetition (economics)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Willingness to payMulti-level datamental disorders0502 economics and businessDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyRevenueMarketingMobile app markethealth care economics and organizationsPrice policybusiness.industry05 social sciencesAdvertisingSettore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-GestionaleMobile App Market Online Distribution Pricing Electronic Commerce Multi-level Data.Mobile app market; Online distribution; Pricing; Electronic commerce; Multi-level dataPrice formation050211 marketingOnline distributionConstruct (philosophy)business050203 business & managementPricingInformation Systems
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