Search results for "FINANCIAL ECONOMICS"

showing 10 items of 277 documents

The Risk-Relevance of Accounting Data: Evidence from the Spanish Stock Market

2006

This paper analyses the relevance of accounting fundamentals to inform about equity risk as measured by the cost of equity capital. Assuming the latter is a summary measure of how investors make decisions regarding the allocation of resources, the strength of the association between the cost of capital and the accounting-based measures of risk indicates how important these measures are for market participants when making economic decisions. To infer the cost of equity capital, we use the O'Hanlon and Steele's method, which is based on the residual income valuation model. Moreover, we use the insights from this model to provide a theoretical underpinning for the choice of the accounting vari…

Equity riskActuarial scienceFinancial economicsbusiness.industryEconomic capitalFinancial risk managementAccountingCapital adequacy ratioCost of capitalAccountingEconomicsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)businessReturn on capitalFinanceEquity capital marketsResidual income valuationJournal of International Financial Management and Accounting
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Volatility-Managing International Equity Risk Factors

2018

Recent research (see Moreira and Muir, 2017) suggests that volatility-managed portfolios take less risk when volatility is high produce large alphas, increase Sharpe ratios, and produce large utility gains for mean-variance investors. We extend this literature by investigating the profitability of volatility-managing the Fama and French (2017) local risk factors in international equity markets. Our general findings indicate that volatility-managing adds value for local risk factors in Europe and Asia, whereas in Japan we find no such evidence. Confirming earlier studies, we find that a risk-based story is unlikely to explain our results.

Equity riskFinancial economicsSharpe ratioValue (economics)EconomicsEquity (finance)Capital asset pricing modelProfitability indexVolatility (finance)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Volatility transmission patterns and terrorist attacks

2009

The objective of this study is to analyze volatility transmission between the US and Eurozone stock markets considering the effects of the September 11, March 11 and July 7 financial crises. In order to do this, we use a multivariate GARCH model and take into account the asymmetric volatility phenomenon, the non-synchronous trading problem and the crises themselves. Moreover, a graphical analysis of the Asymmetric Volatility Impulse-Response Functions (AVIRF) is introduced, which takes into consideration the crisis effect. Results suggest that there is bidirectional and asymmetric volatility transmission and show the different impact that terrorist attacks had on both markets. El objetivo d…

Estadística matemàticaTheorieanwendungtransmissions de volatilitatFinancial economicsEconomicsAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticitymercados financieros internacionalesMercados financieros internacionales; Crisis financieras; GARCH multivariante; Transmisión de volatilidad. International financial markets; Stock market crisis; Multivariate GARCH; Volatility spillovers.theory applicationMultivariate garch modelOrder (exchange)Volatility swapFinances internacionalsEconomicsEconometricsddc:330multivariate GARCHcrisis del mercado de valorescrisi del mercat de valorsRisk managementInternational financeStock (geology)Economic Statistics Econometrics Business InformaticsMercat Investigacióvolatility spilloversmercats financers internacionalsbusiness.industryinternational financial marketsFinancial marketWirtschaftstock market crisisjel:C32jel:F30Political EconomyMathematical statisticsjel:G15Estadística matemáticaVolatility Modelling Multivariate Volatility GARCH models International Finance International Asset Pricing Risk ManagementVolkswirtschaftslehreTerrorismWirtschaftsstatistik Ökonometrie WirtschaftsinformatikGraphical analysisVolatility (finance)businessVolatility transmissionGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinancederrames de volatilidad
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Forecasting Exchange Rates Volatilities Using Artificial Neural Networks

2000

This paper employs Artificial Neural Networks to forecast volatilities of the exchange rates of six currencies against the Spanish peseta. First, we propose to use ANN as an alternative to parametric volatility models, then, we employ them as an aggregation procedure to build hybrid models. Though we do not find a systematic superiority of ANN, our results suggest that they are an interesting alternative to classical parametric volatility models.

Exchange rateArtificial neural networkComputer scienceFinancial economicsExchange rate volatilityComputer Science::Neural and Evolutionary ComputationEconometricsVolatility (finance)Parametric statistics
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CEO Compensation and Risk-Taking: Evidence from Listed European Hotel Firms

2020

This paper examines the relationship between CEO compensation policies and financial performance in the European hotel sector. We analyze CEO cash-, equity- and total-compensation relationships with two accounting-based and two market-based financial performance proxies, including a bi-dimensional proxy formed by stock market return and risk. This bi-dimensional market-based financial performance proxy enables us to take a deep dive into the relationship between CEO compensation policies and firm risk-taking. We then analyze the nature of this relationship by decomposing market-based risk into systematic and idiosyncratic risk, using five alternative asset-pricing factorial models. Our resu…

Executive compensationFinancial economicsCashmedia_common.quotation_subjectSystematic riskEquity (finance)Stock marketBusinessProxy (statistics)Risk takingDeep divemedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Asymmetry of CEO Compensation and the Role of Relative and Macroeconomic Shocks in Risk Taking Incentives

2015

If managers are risk-averse and compensation schemes are not directly linked to shareholder wealth, incentives to allocate effort to manage effects of relative and macroeconomic shocks may be distorted. In this paper we develop a simple model to identify factors that determine the optimal allocation of effort to manage relative and macroeconomic shocks. We then show how serial correlation in shocks, the relative variance of shocks and the ability of managers to influence the effects of shocks on shareholder wealth determine the optimal allocation of managerial effort. Thereafter, we emphasize how CEO compensation depends on performance variables distinguishing between relative and macroecon…

Executive compensationIncentiveShareholderFinancial economicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectOptimal allocationEconometricsEconomicsSample (statistics)Risk takingAsymmetryCompensation (engineering)media_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Trading with Asymmetric Volatility Spillovers

2007

:  We study the profitability of trading strategies based on volatility spillovers between large and small firms. By using the Volatility Impulse-Response Function of Lin (1997) and its extensions, we detect that any volatility shock coming from small companies is important to large companies, but the reverse is only true for negative shocks coming from large firms. To exploit these asymmetric patterns in volatility, different trading rules are designed based on the inverse relationship existing between expected return and volatility. We find that most strategies generate excess after-transaction cost profits, especially after very bad news and very good news coming from large or small firm…

ExploitFinancial economicsMonetary economicsImplied volatilityVolatility risk premiumShock (economics)Trading rulesVolatility swapAccountingVolatility smileEconomicsEconometricsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Expected returnTrading strategyProfitability indexProject portfolio managementVolatility (finance)FinanceJournal of Business Finance & Accounting
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On the origin of power law tails in price fluctuations

2003

In a recent Nature paper, Gabaix et al. \cite{Gabaix03} presented a theory to explain the power law tail of price fluctuations. The main points of their theory are that volume fluctuations, which have a power law tail with exponent roughly -1.5, are modulated by the average market impact function, which describes the response of prices to transactions. They argue that the average market impact function follows a square root law, which gives power law tails for prices with exponent roughly -3. We demonstrate that the long-memory nature of order flow invalidates their statistical analysis of market impact, and present a more careful analysis that properly takes this into account. This makes i…

FOS: Economics and businessStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Financial economicsMathematical financeEconomicsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinancePower lawFinance Commerce correlation matrixFinanceCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Value based trading of real assets in shipping under stochastic freight rates

2009

The article uses a real options valuation model with stochastic freight rates to investigate market efficiency and the economics of switching between the dry bulk and the tanker markets in international shipping. A dry bulk carrier is replaced with a tanker when the expected net present value of such a switch is optimal from a real options based decision rule. Depending on the development of the markets a reversal may take place later. The cost and demand parameters upon which the decisions to switch are made, including the stochastic characteristics of freight rates, are estimated from an empirical analysis that is updated every week throughout a 12-year time period from 1993 to 2005. The …

Factor marketEconomics and EconometricsFinancial economicsInternational shippingValue (economics)Market efficiencyEconomicsEconometricsMarket microstructureDecision ruleReal options valuationNet present valueApplied Economics
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Pricing to market behaviour in European car markets

2003

Abstract This paper investigates PTM behaviour in European car markets for a period of great interest (1993–98), taking into account the role of invoicing currency. The results indicate that local currency price stability is a strong and pervasive phenomenon across products independently of the invoicing currency. The paper offers robustness checks, tests and arguments that justify the interpretation of this finding, at least in part, as evidence of PTM. It implies the existence of market segmentation and price discrimination, despite the completion of the single market programme on 1 January 1993.

Factor marketEconomics and EconometricsMarket segmentationFinancial economicsCurrencyMarket priceEconomicsLocal currencyPrice discriminationPrice of stabilityRobustness (economics)FinanceEuropean Economic Review
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