Search results for "Managerial overconfidence"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Market valuation and acquiring firm performance in the short and long term: Out-of-sample evidence from Spain

2019

We investigate bidder’s short- and long-term performance in periods of high and low valuation market in response to announcements of acquisitions carried out by Spanish listed firms over the period 1991–2016. We find that acquirers of unlisted targets fully react at the announcement date in high valuation periods, meanwhile the underreaction of listed target bidders at the moment of the announcement in low valuation markets is the result of return continuations. In addition, we find that the market reaction do not depend on recent merger history. Therefore, we provide evidence that bidder reaction to acquisitions is not consistent with the predictions of market sentiment (optimism) after c…

Market sentimentEconomics and EconometricsFirm acquisitionStrategy and ManagementHigh valuationMonetary economicsUnderreactionddc:6500502 economics and businessG34050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementMarket sentimentMarket valueValuation (finance)050208 financeG1405 social sciencesL33Market reactionGeneral MedicineGeneral Business Management and AccountingD81Out of sample050211 marketingManagerial overconfidenceBusinessMarket valuation050203 business & managementBRQ Business Research Quarterly
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Dividend Policy and Managerial Overconfidence: French Evidence

2021

This paper examines the impact of managerial overconfidence on dividend policy.The literature has identified two strands of reasoning. Deshmukh et al. (2013) argue that overconfident managers with relatively high investment needs perceive external funds as more costly than internal financing. This leads them to pay out lower dividends. Conversely, Wu and Liu (2011) claim that overconfident CEOs expect higher future cash flows and are prone to pay out higher dividends. We study a sample of 120 French firms for the period 2000–2015. Our results provide evidence that CEOs’ overconfidence plays a decisive role in explaining the dividend policy of French firms. Managerial overconfidence exerts a…

[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationDividend policyManagerial overconfidence[SHS.GESTION] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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