Working Papers
All Working Papers from the Finance
Department can be found online at the
Social Science Research Network (SSRN).
Selected Working Papers
“Lost in Translation? The Effect
of Cultural Values on Mergers Around the World” (2010)
Kenneth Ahern, Daniele Daminelli, and Cesare Fracassi
We find strong evidence that three
key dimensions of national culture (trust, hierarchy, and individualism)
affect merger volume, synergy gains, deal structure, and the division of
gains between bidders and targets in cross-border mergers. First, the volume
and gains of cross-border mergers are lower when countries are more
culturally distant. Second, firms from countries that are more trusting and
hierarchical capture a larger share of combined merger gains. Finally, the
use of termination fees, tender offers, and the form of payment vary
systematically by cultural differences. The results are the first
large-scale evidence that cultural differences have substantial impacts on
multiple aspects of cross-border mergers.
"Who Writes the News?
Corporate Press Releases during Merger Negotiations" (2010)
Kenneth Ahern and Denis Sosyura
Firms have an incentive to
manage media coverage to influence the outcome of important corporate
events. We investigate this hypothesis by studying corporate press
releases during mergers. Using comprehensive data on media coverage and
novel data on merger negotiations, we find that bidders in stock mergers
originate substantially more press releases after the start of merger
negotiations, but before the public announcement. This strategy
generates a short-lived run-up in bidders' stock prices during the
period when the stock exchange ratio is determined. The run-up and
reversal in media coverage and stock prices cannot be explained by
merger rumors, passive media management, or opportunistic merger timing.
Overall, we present the first evidence on active media management in
M&A.
"The Great Surge in
Mortgage Defaults 2006-2009: The Comparative Roles of Economic
Conditions, Underwriting and Moral Hazard" (2011)
Dennis Capozza and Robert Van Order
In this research we exploit the
power of a large and rich sample of individual loans originated from
2000-2007 to study the relative roles of underwriting, moral hazard and
local economic conditions in the Great Surge in mortgage defaults. With
these data we can observe the information available to investors and
control for observable underwriting as well as economic conditions. We
can also use the data to infer the share due to moral hazard. Estimates
from these data suggest that much of the variation was due to economic
conditions.
"Yesterday's Heroes:
Compensation and Creative Taking" (2010)
Ing Haw Cheng, Harrison Hong, and Jose Scheinkman
NBER WP#16176, European Corporate Governance Institute WP# 285
We investigate the link between
compensation and risk-taking among finance firms during the period of
1992-2008. First, there are substantial cross-firm differences in residual
pay (defined as total executive compensation controlling for firm size).
Second, residual pay is correlated with price-based risk-taking measures
including firm beta, return volatility, the sensitivity of firm stock price
to the ABX subprime index, and tail cumulative return performance. Third,
these risk-taking measures are correlated with short-term pay such as
bonuses and options even controlling for longer-term incentives such as
insider ownership stakes. Finally, compensation and risk-taking are not
related to governance variables; but they do convary with ownership by
institutional investors who tend to have short-termist preferences and the
power to influence firms' management policies. These findings suggest that
our residual pay measure in also potentially picking up firm-wide,
high-powered incentives not captured by insider ownership. They also suggest
that the correlation between residual pay and firm risk-taking is due to
investors with heterogeneous short-termist preferences investing in
different firms and incentivizing them to take different levels of risk.
"Does capital market myopia affect plant
productivity? Evidence from 'going private' transactions" (2010)
Sreedhar Bharath, Amy Dittmar, and Jagadeesh Sivadasan
One influential criticism of the stock market
oriented U.S. financial system is that its excessive focus on short term
quarterly earnings forces public firms to behave in a myopic manner. We
hypothesize that if capital markets pressure listed firms to be myopic in a
way that impacts efficiency, then going private (when myopia is eliminated)
should cause the U.S. firms to improve their establishment level
productivity relative to a peer control groups of firms. We find no evidence
that this is the case. Our key finding is that while there is evidence for
substantial within-establishment increases in productivity after going
private, there is little evidence of difference-in-differences efficiency
gains relative to peer groups of establishments constructed to control for
industry, age, size at the time of going private, and the endogeneity of the
going private decision effects. Also, we do not find evidence that myopic
markets lead to under-investment at the establishment level. On the
contrary, we find that after going private, firms shrink capital and
employment, and close plants more quickly, relative to peer groups. Our
findings cast doubt on the view that public markets cause listed firms to
make sub-optimal, productivity-decreasing choices, or under-invest at the
establishment level.
"Divisional Managers and
Internal Capital Markets" (2010)
Ran Duchin and Denis Sosyura
Using
hand-collected data on divisional managers at the S&P 500 firms, we
provide one of the first studies of their role in internal capital
budgeting. Divisional managers with connections to the CEO receive more
capital. Managers' informal connections, such as social ties to the CEO,
outweigh measures of managers' formal influence, such as board
membership and seniority, and affect both the appointment of managers
and subsequent capital allocations to their divisions. The impact of
connections on investment efficiency depends on the tradeoff between
agency and information asymmetry. When governance is weak, connections
reduce investment efficiency and erode firm value by fostering
favoritism. When information asymmetry is high, managerial ties increase
investment efficiency and firm value by facilitating information
transfer. Overall, we provide novel evidence on the role of formal and
informal managerial influence inside conglomerates.
"The
CDS/Bond Basis and the Cross Section of Corporate Bond Returns” (2009)
Gi Hyun Kim, Haitao Li, and Weina Zhang
The
CDS/Bond basis trade has played an important role in the current
financial crisis. Many banks and hedge funds, such as Deutsche Bank,
Merrill Lynch, and Citadel, have lost billions of dollars in this trade.
The widening of the basis has also created significant disruptions in
the credit market. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive empirical
analysis on the CDS/bond basis and the impact of the basis on expected
corporate bond returns. We construct the basis based on CDS spreads from
Market and bond prices from TRACE and NAIC from 2001 to 2008. We find
that on average the basis of investment grade bonds is negative during
our entire sample and that bonds with lower basis tend to be older and
have lower rating, longer maturity, higher duration and convexity. We
also find that low basis bonds tend to have higher future returns than
high basis bonds and that the basis can predict future returns of
individual bonds and bond portfolios. Most important, we find that the
basis factor, constructed as the return differential between low and
high basis portfolios, helps explaining the cross-sectional differences
in the expected returns of corporate bonds even after controlling for
most known systematic risk factors.
“The Independent Board Requirement and Executive Suites”
(2011)
Han Kim and Yao Lu
NYSE
and NASDAQ listed firms are required to have a majority of independent
directors starting in 2004. Our investigation using a
difference-in-differences approach reveals that the regulation triggered
greater entrenchment in executive suites, as measured by abnormal
fractions of top-executives appointed (AFTA) during the current CEO's
tenure. The increases in AFTA are not due to more executive turnovers or
other confounding effects. Furthermore, the newly appointed executives
are more connected to their CEOs through past employment. Higher AFTA is
associated with lower firm valuation and less profitable acquisition
bids. Moreover, the regulation's overall effect on shareholder value is
negative and significant, implying that the benefits of more independent
directors are overwhelmed by harmful effects of the unintended
consequences. Importantly, AFTA does not increase when firms face strong
product market competition, demonstrating the merits of market-based
solutions for better governance.
"Monetary Policy Risk and the Cross Section of Stock Returns” (2009)
Erica Li and
Francisco Palomino
The
effects of monetary policy shocks on the equity premium and the
cross-section of stock returns are analyzed in general equilibrium.
Policy shocks affect real stock returns as a result of nominal
product-price rigidities. Two opposite effects determine the impact of
policy shocks on stock returns. A contractionary shock increases the
marginal utility of consumption, reduces aggregate output and increases
production markups. The output reduction requires a positive premium in
expected returns. The markup increase acts as a consumption hedge and
involves a negative premium. Low elasticities of intertemporal
substitution of consumption and labor amplify the markup effect and can
generate a negative net effect on the equity premium. In the
cross-section, a contractionary shock reduces the relative output and
expands the relative markup of a more rigid price industry with respect
to a more flexible price industry. If the relative markup expansion
dominates the relative output decline, the expected stock return of the
more flexible price industry is higher than that of the more rigid price
one. The policy-induced markup variation also generates time variation
in expected returns. As the responsiveness of the policy to economic
conditions increases, the effects of policy shocks on the equity premium
and the cross-section decline.
“Financial Market Dislocations” (2011)
Paolo Pasquariello
Dislocations occur when financial markets, operating under stressful
conditions, experience large, widespread asset mispricing. This study
documents systematic financial market dislocations in world capital markets
and the importance of their fluctuations for expected stock returns. Our
novel, model-free measure of these dislocations is a monthly average of six
hundred abnormal absolute violations of three textbook arbitrage parties in
stock, foreign exchange, and money markets. We find that investors demand
economically and statistically significant risk premiums to hold U.S. stocks
and U.S. and international stock portfolios performing poorly during market
dislocations.
“Optimal
Corporate Governance in the Presence of an Activist Investor” (2010)
Jonathan Cohn and Uday Rajan
We
provide a model of governance in which a board arbitrates between an
activist investor and a manager. Reputational concerns make the manager
reluctant to implement a change in firm strategy, creating an agency
conflict. The optimal level of internal governance as supplied by the board
depends on both the severity of the agency conflict and the strength of
external governance. In some cases, the board commits to an interventionist
policy to induce participation from the activist. In other cases, board
intervention exacerbates managerial misbehavior, so it is optimal to be
passive. The overall relationship between internal and external governance
is non-monotone. As external governance becomes stronger, internal and
external governance are first substitutes, and then complements.
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