Search results for "jel:G15"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Globalization of Monitoring Practices: The Case of American Influences on the Dismissal Risk of European CEOs

2013

Accepted version of an article from the Journal of Economics and Business This study examines globalization of monitoring practices by focusing on how American (U.S.) influences on European firms impact the dismissal risk for these firms' CEOs. Specifically, we argue that the stronger short term orientation of the American corporate governance system increase the dismissal performance sensitivity faced by European CEOs, indirectly and directly. The former materializes via European firms cross-listing on U.S. exchanges, the latter results from European firms hiring U.S. independent board members. Both influences are expected to result in increased dismissal performance sensitivity. Based on …

Economics and EconometricsPerformance sensitivityExecutive compensationForeign board membershipbusiness.industryCorporate governancePrincipal–agent problemExecutive payAccountingDismissalGeneral Business Management and Accountingjel:G32Peer reviewGlobalizationInternationalizationjel:M52Dismissaljel:G15jel:M14jel:G18jel:M16businessVDP::Social science: 200::Economics: 210::Business: 213Executive pay; CEO dismissal; Performance sensitivity; Foreign board membership
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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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Interest rate co-movements, global factors and the long end of the term spread

2012

The disconnect between rising short and low long interest rates has been a distinctive feature of the 2000s. Both research and policy circles have argued that international forces, such as global monetary policy (e.g. Rogoff, 2006); international business cycles (e.g. Borio and Filardo, 2007); or a global savings glut (e.g Bernanke, 2005) may be responsible. In this paper, we employ recent advances in panel data econometrics to document the disconnect and link it explicitly to the existence of a global latent factor that dominates the long end of the term spread for the recent period; the saving glut story emerges as the most likely contender for the global factor.

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectYield (finance)jel:E43Short interest rates Long interest rateInternational economicsjel:C33Short and Long Interest Rates Financial Globalization Panel Data Factor Modelsjel:F36Factor modelsHGjel:F01Term (time)Interest ratejel:G15EconomicsEmerging marketsFinanceFinancial globalizationPanel dataPanel dataFactor analysismedia_commonFinancial globalizationJournal of Banking & Finance
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Financial Fragmentation and Economic Growth in Europe

2015

Using industry data from Eurostat and applying the Rajan-Zingales methodology, we investigate the real growth effects of banking sector integration in the European Union. Our sample stretches from 2000 until 2012 and includes the phase of rapid financial integration before the global financial crisis as well as the following phase of financial fragmentation and bank deleveraging. We find evidence that banking sector integration had a more than four times stronger growth effect during the crisis than in normal times. Growth effects are also stronger in times of domestic bank deleveraging. We conclude that concerns of European policy makers about fragmentation in the European banking sector a…

cross-border lending; economic growth; European Union; financial crisis; financial fragmentation; financial integration; foreign banks; Rajan-Zingales methodologyjel:G15F36Financial fragmentation; financial integration; foreign banks; crossborder lending; economic growth; financial crisis; Rajan-Zingales methodologyG15ddc:330G01jel:G01jel:F36SSRN Electronic Journal
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UME Y LA INTEGRACIÓN DE LOS MERCADOS DE CAPITALES EUROPEOS: RELEVANCIA DEL TIPO DE CAMBIO Y LA INFLACIÓN

2007

The aim of this paper is to investigate the effects of the European Monetary Union on the hypothesis of an integrated European Capital Market from January 1993 to December 2004. The extent of the period and the use of Fama and MacBeth [1973]'s methodology for estimating a large number of international asset pricing models that includes an Adler and Dumas [1983] model with and without domestic factor make possible to evaluate this hypothesis as a process towards a full integration. However, our results show that the integration is not a uniform process at all times and for all stocks and recedes in the period 2001-04 with the reappearance of a significant domestic risk premium (diversifiable…

jel:G15Modelos internacionales de valoración de activos; riesgos asociados al tipo de cambio y a la inflación; Unión Europea International asset pricing; exchange and inflation rate risks; European Unionjel:G12
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