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The Overnight Drift Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-03-13 Nina Boyarchenko, Lars C Larsen, Paul Whelan
This paper documents that U.S. equity returns are large and positive during the opening hours of European markets. These returns are pervasive and highly economically and statistically significant. Consistent with models of inventory risk, we demonstrate a strong relationship with order imbalances at the close of the preceding U.S. trading day. Rationalizing unconditionally positive “overnight drift”
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Secret and Overt Information Acquisition in Financial Markets Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-03-03 Yan Xiong, Liyan Yang
We study the observability of investors' information-acquisition activities in financial markets. Improving observability leads to two strategic effects on information acquisition: (1) the pricing effect, which arises from interactions between investors and the market maker and can encourage or discourage information acquisition, and (2) the competition effect, which concerns interactions among investors
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Joining Forces: The Spillover Effects of EPA Enforcement Actions and the Role of Socially Responsible Investors Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-02-24 Sudipto Dasgupta, Thanh D Huynh, Ying Xia
We find that firms reduce toxic emissions at their local plants following EPA enforcement actions against nearby plants operated by peer firms that compete in the same product market. These reductions are more pronounced for plants located near socially responsible mutual funds (SRMFs) that hold these plants’ parent firms’ shares. Close proximity to SRMFs is associated with real investment in abatement
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Option Return Predictability with Machine Learning and Big Data Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-02-24 Turan G Bali, Heiner Beckmeyer, Mathis Mörke, Florian Weigert
Drawing upon more than 12 million observations over the period from 1996 to 2020, we find that allowing for nonlinearities significantly increases the out-of-sample performance of option and stock characteristics in predicting future option returns. The nonlinear machine learning models generate statistically and economically sizable profits in the long-short portfolios of equity options even after
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Monetary Policy, Business Liquidity and Survival: Evidence from the Refinancing Channel Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-02-24 Haoyang Liu, Rodney Ramcharan, Dean Parker
We study the impact of the refinancing channel of monetary policy on very small and medium-sized businesses. Using data covering the near universe of these businesses, we find that increased household refinancing reduces the probability that a business exits or exhausts its debt capacity in the calendar year, as well as 6 years after the first exposure. It also helps younger businesses maintain credit
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How ETFs Amplify the Global Financial Cycle in Emerging Markets Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-02-16 Nathan Converse, Eduardo Levy-Yeyati, Tomas Williams
We study how the growth of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) affects the sensitivity of international capital flows to the global financial cycle. Using comprehensive fund-level data on investor flows, we show that their sensitivity to global financial conditions for equity (bond) ETFs is 2.5 (2.25) times higher than for equity (bond) mutual funds. This higher sensitivity can be directly linked to ETFs
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Designing Securities for Scrutiny Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-02-10 Brendan Daley, Brett Green, Victoria Vanasco
We investigate the effect of scrutiny (e.g., credit ratings, analyst reports, or mandatory disclosures) on the security design problem of a privately informed issuer. We show that scrutiny has important implications for both the form of security designed and the amount of inefficient retention of cash flows. The model predicts that issuers will design informationally sensitive securities (i.e., levered
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What Drives Firms’ Hiring Decisions? An Asset Pricing Perspective Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-02-08 Frederico Belo, Andres Donangelo, Xiaoji Lin, Ding Luo
We document that the aggregate hiring rate of publicly traded firms in the U.S. economy negatively predicts stock market returns and long-term cash flows, and positively predicts short-term cash flows. In addition, through a variance decomposition, we show that the time-series variation in the aggregate hiring rate is mainly driven by changes in discount rates and short-term expected cash flows, with
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Do Corporate Disclosures Constrain Strategic Analyst Behavior? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-30 Yen-Cheng Chang, Alexander Ljungqvist, Kevin Tseng
We show that analyst behavior changes in response to a randomly assigned shock that exogenously varies the timeliness and cost of accessing mandatory disclosures in the cross-section of investors: analysts reduce coverage and issue less optimistic, more accurate, less bold, and less informative forecasts. Our evidence indicates that analysts reduce a strategic component of their behavior: the changes
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Trust, Transparency, and Complexity Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-28 Richard T Thakor, Robert C Merton
This paper develops a theory that generates an equilibrium relationship between product complexity, transparency, and trust in firms. Complexity, transparency, and the evolution of trust are all endogenous, and equilibrium transparency is nonmonotonic. The least-trusted firms choose the lowest product complexity, remain opaque, and substitute ex ante third-party verification for information disclosure
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The Leading Premium Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-24 Mariano M Croce, Tatyana Marchuk, Christian Schlag
In this paper, we consider conditional measures of lead-lag relations between aggregate growth and industry-level cash flow growth in the United States. Our results show that firms in leading industries pay an average annualized return 3.6% higher than that of firms in lagging industries. Using both time-series and cross-sectional tests, we estimate an annual pure timing premium ranging from 1.2% to
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Is There Investment Value in the Soft-Dollar Arrangement? Evidence from Mutual Funds Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-23 Sinan Gokkaya, Xi Liu, Veronika Krepely Pool, Fei Xie, Jinfan Zhang
Combining novel data on analyst employment history and mutual fund commission payments, we show that client funds generate higher returns on stocks for which they have access to research by industry expert analysts. The outperformance is greater when funds are more important clients and cannot be attributed to tipping. Client funds place modestly higher weights on stocks covered by industry expert
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Precautionary Saving in a Financially Constrained Firm Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Andrew B Abel, Stavros Panageas
For a firm that cannot raise external funds, cash on hand serves as precautionary saving. We derive a closed-form expression for the target level of cash on hand in the presence of persistent cash flows. Contrary to conventional wisdom, a mean-preserving increase in the volatility of cash flow can decrease this target. Over the set of admissible parameter values, the average impact of volatility on
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Factor Momentum Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-14 Robert D Arnott, Vitali Kalesnik, Juhani T Linnainmaa
Factors display strong cross-sectional momentum that subsumes momentum in industries and other portfolio characteristics. The profits of all these momentum strategies—based on factors, industries, and other characteristics—significantly correlate with each other and therefore likely emanate from the same source. If factors display momentum, so will any set of portfolios with cross-sectional variation
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Dollar and Exports Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-14 Valentina Bruno, Hyun Song Shin
The strength of the U.S. dollar has attributes of a barometer of dollar credit conditions, with a stronger dollar associated with tighter dollar credit conditions. We find that following dollar appreciation, exporters that are more reliant on dollar-funded bank credit suffer a greater decline in credit and slowdown in exports, including those exporting to the United States. Our findings shed light
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Neglected Peers in Merger Valuations Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-11 Feng Guo, Tingting Liu, Danni Tu
Using novel merger valuation data, we show that firms selected by investment banks as “comparable peers” are more than twice as likely to later become takeover targets themselves compared to matched control firms. Peer firms not subsequently acquired attract more institutional ownership and analyst coverage, deliver strong operating performance, reduce investments, and increase payouts. Investors are
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Climate Risk Disclosure and Institutional Investors Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Emirhan Ilhan, Philipp Krueger, Zacharias Sautner, Laura T Starks
Through a survey and analyses of observational data, we provide systematic evidence that institutional investors value and demand climate risk disclosures. The survey reveals the investors have a strong demand for climate risk disclosures, and many actively engage their portfolio firms for improvements. Empirical analyses of holdings data corroborate this evidence by showing a significantly positive
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Regulatory Intensity and Firm-Specific Exposure Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-08 Joseph Kalmenovitz
Building on administrative data and machine-learning models, I develop a firm-specific measure of regulatory intensity: cost of compliance with all federal paperwork regulations. Regulatory intensity increases the cost of goods sold and overhead spending (SGA). It also incentivizes companies to reduce capital investment, hire fewer employees, and lobby more. The effects are particularly strong among
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Human Capital Investment after the Storm Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2023-01-04 Emily A Gallagher, Stephen B Billings, Lowell R Ricketts
How does household exposure to a natural disaster affect higher education investments? Using variation in flooding from Hurricane Harvey (2017), we find that college-aged adults from flooded blocks in Houston are 7% less likely than counterparts to have student loans after Harvey, with larger effects in areas with more potential first-generation students. We find a similar relative decline in enrollment
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How Large Are Bequest Motives? Estimates Based on Health Shocks Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-23 Jens Soerlie Kvaerner
I analyze the inter vivo transfers and bequest decisions of 700,000 individuals during a period when the decision maker receives negative news regarding their life expectancy. The event that initiates the news is a health outcome. Expected mortality increases both the likelihood of transferring wealth to the next generation and the amount transferred. The size of the inter vivo transfer and bequest
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Do Corporations Retain Too Much Cash? Evidence from a Natural Experiment Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-22 Hwanki Brian Kim, Woojin Kim, Mathias Kronlund
Corporations have accumulated record amounts of cash. We study whether firms' cash retention has been excessive by examining a Korean reform that introduced a new tax on earnings retained as cash. Difference-in-differences tests show that treated firms reduce cash retention and instead increase payouts and investments. Market participants react favorably to the reform, consistent with excessive cash
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Deposit Insurance and Depositor Behavior: Evidence from Colombia Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-14 Nicolás de Roux, Nicola Limodio
This paper studies the effect of deposit insurance on depositor behavior. Our theoretical framework integrates insights from public and financial economics and predicts that (1) deposit insurance induces bunching at the threshold in the deposit distribution and (2) an increase in the insurance threshold promotes deposit growth, particularly higher for individuals bunching at the initial limit. We exploit
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Finding Fortune: How Do Institutional Investors Pick Asset Managers? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-14 Gregory W Brown, Oleg R Gredil, Preetesh Kantak
We propose and test a framework of private information acquisition and decision timing for asset allocators hiring outside investment managers. Using unique data on due diligence interactions between an institutional allocator and 860 hedge fund managers, we find that the production of private information complements public information. The allocator strategically chooses how much proprietary information
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The Impact of Risk Cycles on Business Cycles: A Historical View Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-13 Jon Danielsson, Marcela Valenzuela, Ilknur Zer
We investigate the effects of financial risk cycles on business cycles, using a panel spanning 73 countries since 1900. Agents use a Bayesian learning model to form their beliefs about risk. We construct a proxy of these beliefs and show that perceived low risk encourages risk-taking, augmenting growth at the cost of accumulating financial vulnerabilities, and, therefore, a reversal in growth follows
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Watch What They Do, Not What They Say: Estimating Regulatory Costs from Revealed Preferences Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-03 Adrien Alvero, Sakai Ando, Kairong Xiao
We show that distortion in the size distribution of banks around regulatory thresholds can be used to identify costs of bank regulation. We build a structural model in which banks can strategically bunch their assets below regulatory thresholds to avoid regulations. The resultant distortion in the size distribution of banks reveals the magnitude of regulatory costs. Using U.S. bank data, we estimate
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Labor Force Demographics and Corporate Innovation Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-12-02 François Derrien, Ambrus Kecskes, Phuong-Anh Nguyen
Firms in younger labor markets produce more innovation. We establish this by instrumenting the current labor force with historical births in each local labor market in the United States. Analyses of firms and inventors allow us to rule out unobservable heterogeneity across local labor markets and firms, life cycles, and other effects. Corporate innovation in younger labor markets reflects the innovative
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How Has COVID-19 Impacted Research Production in Economics and Finance? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-11-30 Samuel Kruger, Gonzalo Maturana, Jordan Nickerson
Following the onset of COVID-19, research production in economics and finance (measured by the posting of working papers) increased by 29%. Production increases were widespread across geographies, job titles, departments, and ages with larger increases in top departments and for people under the age of 35. Men and women both experienced production increases with the exception of women between the age
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Real Effects of Search Frictions in Consumer Credit Markets Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-11-24 Bronson Argyle, Taylor Nadauld, Christopher Palmer
We show that search frictions in credit markets affect accepted interest rates and loan sizes and distort consumption. Using data on car loan applications and originations not intermediated by car dealers, we isolate quasi-exogenous variation in both the costs and benefits to searching for credit. After identifying lender-specific policies that price risk discontinuously, we study the differential
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How Fast Do Investors Learn? Asset Management Investors and Bayesian Learning Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-11-23 Christopher Schwarz, Zheng Sun
We study the speed with which investors learn about managers’ skills by examining how quickly investor and managers’ beliefs converge. After showing our measure proxies for the change in the dispersion of beliefs, we find that hedge fund investors learn as fast as suggested by Bayes’ rule. However, we find mutual fund investors learn more slowly than suggested by Bayes’ rule. Mutual fund investors’
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Are CLO Collateral and Tranche Ratings Disconnected? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-11-21 John M Griffin, Jordan Nickerson
Between March and August 2020, S&P and Moody's downgraded approximately 25% of collateral feeding into CLOs and only 2% of tranche values, with rating actions concentrating in junior tranches. Both S&P and Moody's modeling indicate that the impacts should have been considerably larger, especially for higher-rated tranches. Neither changes in correlation nor the accumulation of pre-COVID-19 protective
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Man versus Machine Learning: The Term Structure of Earnings Expectations and Conditional Biases Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-31 Jules H van Binsbergen, Xiao Han, Alejandro Lopez-Lira
We introduce a real-time measure of conditional biases to firms’ earnings forecasts. The measure is defined as the difference between analysts’ expectations and a statistically optimal unbiased machine-learning benchmark. Analysts’ conditional expectations are, on average, biased upward, a bias that increases in the forecast horizon. These biases are associated with negative cross-sectional return
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Regulatory Limits to Risk Management Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-31 Ishita Sen
Variable annuities, the largest liability of U.S. life insurers, are investment products containing long-dated minimum return guarantees. I show that guarantees with similar economic risks are treated differently by regulation and these differences impact insurers’ hedging behavior. When the regulatory regime recognizes certain risks, insurers start to hedge these risks in a substantial way. For some
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Trendy Business Cycles and Asset Prices Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-26 Jesse Davis, Gill Segal
The data-generating process underlying productivity includes both trend and business-cycle shocks, generating counterfactuals for prices under full information. In practice, agents’ inability to immediately distinguish between the two shocks creates “rational confusion”: each shock inherits properties of its counterpart. This confusion magnifies the perceived share of permanent shocks and implies that
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Persistent Crises and Levered Asset Prices Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-24 Lars-Alexander Kuehn, David Schreindorfer, Florian Schulz
This paper shows that standard disaster risk models are inconsistent with movements in stock market volatility and credit spreads during disasters. We resolve this shortcoming by incorporating persistent macroeconomic crises into a structural credit risk model. The model successfully captures the joint dynamics of aggregate consumption, financial leverage, and asset market risks, both unconditionally
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Pricing Implications of Noise Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-22 Christian L Goulding, Shrihari Santosh, Xingtan Zhang
We study the interaction between noisy demand and skewed asset payoffs. In our model, price as a function of quantities is convex in a neighborhood around zero if and only if skewness is positive. The combination of convexity and noise produces the idiosyncratic skewness effect, a documented negative relationship between an asset's idiosyncratic skewness and its expected return. We further offer an
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Redemption in Kind and Mutual Fund Liquidity Management Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-19 Vikas Agarwal, Honglin Ren, Ke Shen, Haibei Zhao
Open-end mutual funds can use redemption in kind to satisfy investor redemptions by delivering securities instead of cash. We find that funds that reserve their rights to redeem in kind experience less redemption after poor performance. Evidence from actual in-kind transactions reveals several unique mechanisms for redemption in kind to mitigate fund runs, including the delivery of more illiquid stocks
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The Missing Homebuyers: Regional Heterogeneity and Credit Contractions Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-19 Pierre Mabille
This paper documents an unprecedented decrease in young homeownership since the Great Recession driven by regions with high house prices. Using a panel of U.S. metro areas, I calibrate an equilibrium spatial macro-finance model with overlapping generations of mobile households. The dynamics of regional housing markets is explained by an aggregate credit contraction with heterogeneous local impacts
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Do Cash Windfalls Affect Wages? Evidence from R&D Grants to Small Firms Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-17 Sabrina T Howell, J David Brown
This paper examines how employee earnings respond to a one-time cash flow shock in the form of a government R&D grant. In a regression discontinuity design, we find that the grant immediately increases average annual employee-level earnings by 2.9%. This benefit accrues only to incumbent employees and rises with job tenure. The grant also affects firm growth, but the initial wage patterns do not appear
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The Dynamics of Disagreement Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-14 Kent Daniel, Alexander Klos, Simon Rottke
In this paper, we infer how the estimates of firm value by “optimists” and “pessimists” evolve in response to information shocks. Specifically, we examine returns and disagreement measures for portfolios of short-sale-constrained stocks that have experienced large gains or large losses. Our analysis suggests the presence of two groups, one of which overreacts to new information and remains biased over
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The Demand for Money, Near-Money, and Treasury Bonds Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-10 Arvind Krishnamurthy, Wenhao Li
Bank-created money, shadow-bank money, and Treasury bonds all satisfy investors’ demand for liquidity. We measure the quantity of these forms of liquidity and their corresponding liquidity premium in a sample from 1934 to 2016, estimating the substitutability of these assets and the liquidity per unit delivered by each asset. Treasuries and bank transaction deposits are imperfect substitutes, in contrast
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Rating Agency Fees: Pay to Play in Public Finance? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-10-06 Jess Cornaggia, Kimberly J. Cornaggia, Ryan Israelsen
We examine the relationship between credit rating levels and rating agency fees in a public finance market in which rating agencies earn lower fees and face higher disclosure requirements relative to corporate bond and structured finance markets. Controlling for variation in the complexity of credit analysis at the issue level, we find evidence that rating agency conflicts of interest distort credit
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Why Do Boards Exist? Governance Design in the Absence of Corporate Law Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-29 Mike Burkart, Salvatore Miglietta, Charlotte Ostergaard
We study under which circumstances firms choose to install boards and their roles in a historical setting in which neither boards nor their duties are mandated by law. Boards arise in firms with large, heterogeneous shareholder bases. We propose that an important role of boards is to mediate between heterogeneous shareholders with divergent interests. Voting restrictions are common and ensure that
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Macroprudential Policy with Liquidity Panics Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-29 Daniel Garcia-Macia, Alonso Villacorta
We study the optimality of macroprudential policies in an environment where banks provide liquidity to firms. Informational frictions between banks can cause interbank market freezes, prompting firms to accumulate their own liquid assets. Liquidity hoarding by firms in turn reduces the demand for bank loans and bank profitability, makes interbank market freezes even more likely, and may ultimately
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Disloyal Managers and Shareholders’ Wealth Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-21 Eliezer M Fich, Jarrad Harford, Anh L Tran
A duty of loyalty prohibits fiduciaries from appropriating business opportunities from their companies. Starting in 2000, Delaware, followed by several other states, allowed boards to waive their duty. We show that public firms covered by waiver laws invest less in R&D, produce fewer and less valuable patents, and exhibit abnormally high inventor departures. Remaining innovation activities contribute
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From Market Making to Matchmaking: Does Bank Regulation Harm Market Liquidity? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-14 Gideon Saar, Jian Sun, Ron Yang, Haoxiang Zhu
Postcrisis bank regulations raised market-making costs for bank-affiliated dealers. We show that this can, somewhat surprisingly, improve overall investor welfare and reduce average transaction costs despite the increased cost of immediacy. Bank dealers in OTC markets optimize between two parallel trading mechanisms: market making and matchmaking. Bank regulations that increase market-making costs
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Do Investors Care about Impact? Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-13 Florian Heeb, Julian F Kölbel, Falko Paetzold, Stefan Zeisberger
We assess how investors’ willingness-to-pay (WTP) for sustainable investments responds to the social impact of those investments, using a framed field experiment. While investors have a substantial WTP for sustainable investments, they do not pay significantly more for more impact. This also holds for dedicated impact investors. When investors compare several sustainable investments, their WTP responds
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Illiquidity and Higher Cumulants Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-13 Sergei Glebkin, Semyon Malamud, Alberto Teguia
We characterize the unique equilibrium in an economy populated by strategic CARA investors who trade multiple risky assets with arbitrarily distributed payoffs. We use our explicit solution to study the joint behavior of illiquidity of option contracts. Option bid-ask spreads are proportional to risk aversion and risk-neutral variances of option payoffs. Spreads may decrease in risk aversion, physical
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New Perspectives on Insurance Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-07 Ralph S J Koijen, Motohiro Yogo
This special issue originates from a dual submission conference with the NBER Insurance Working Group and the Corporate Finance Program in 2020. It brings a broader perspective on important frictions in insurance markets, including trust between insurers and policyholders, conflicts of interest among brokers, suboptimal policyholder behavior, and risk-based capital regulation. Several developments
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Credit Building or Credit Crumbling? A Credit Builder Loan’s Effects on Consumer Behavior and Market Efficiency in the United States Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-09-02 Jeremy Burke, Julian Jamison, Dean Karlan, Kata Mihaly, Jonathan Zinman
A randomized encouragement design yields null average effects of a credit builder loan (CBL) on consumer credit scores. But machine learning algorithms indicate the nulls are due to stark, offsetting treatment effects depending on baseline installment credit activity. Delinquency on preexisting loan obligations drives the negative effects, suggesting that adding a CBL overextends some consumers and
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Advising the Management: A Theory of Shareholder Engagement Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-26 Ali Kakhbod, Uliana Loginova, Andrey Malenko, Nadya Malenko
We study the effectiveness of shareholder engagement, that is, shareholders communicating their views to management. When shareholders and management have different beliefs, each shareholder engages more effectively when other shareholders engage as well. A limited shareholder base can thus prevent effective engagement. However, a limited shareholder base naturally arises under heterogeneous beliefs
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A Quantitative Model of Dynamic Moral Hazard Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Hengjie Ai, Dana Kiku, Rui Li
We develop an equilibrium model with moral hazard, which arises because some productivity shocks are privately observed by firm managers only. We characterize the optimal contract and its implications for firm size, growth, and managerial pay-performance sensitivity and exploit them to quantify the severity of the moral hazard problem. Our estimation suggests that unobservable shocks are relatively
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Conflicting Interests and the Effect of Fiduciary Duty: Evidence from Variable Annuities Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Mark Egan, Shan Ge, Johnny Tang
We examine the variable annuity market to study conflicts of interest and the effect of fiduciary duty in brokerage markets. Insurers typically pay brokers higher commissions for selling more expensive annuities. Our results indicate that sales are four times as sensitive to brokers’ interests as to investors’. To limit conflicts of interest, the Department of Labor proposed a rule in 2016 holding
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Can Risk Be Shared across Investor Cohorts? Evidence from a Popular Savings Product Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Johan Hombert, Victor Lyonnet
We study how retail savings products can share market risk across investor cohorts, thereby completing financial markets. Financial intermediaries smooth returns by varying reserves, which are passed on between successive investor cohorts, thereby redistributing wealth across cohorts. Using data on euro contracts sold by life insurers in France, we estimate this redistribution to be large: 0.8% of
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Insurers as Asset Managers and Systemic Risk Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-18 Andrew Ellul, Chotibhak Jotikasthira, Anastasia Kartasheva, Christian T Lundblad, Wolf Wagner
Financial intermediaries often provide guarantees resembling out-of-the-money put options, exposing them to undiversifiable tail risk. We present a model in the context of the U.S. life insurance industry in which the regulatory framework incentivizes value-maximizing insurers to hedge variable annuity (VA) guarantees, though imperfectly, and shifts risks into high-risk and illiquid bonds. We calibrate
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Estimating General Equilibrium Spillovers of Large-Scale Shocks Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-18 Kilian Huber
Large-scale shocks directly affect some firms and households and indirectly affect others through general equilibrium spillovers. In this paper, I describe how researchers can directly estimate spillovers using quasi-experimental or experimental variation. I then argue that spillover estimates suffer from distinct sources of mechanica l bias that standard empirical tools cannot resolve. These biases
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Echo Chambers Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-17 J Anthony Cookson, Joseph E Engelberg, William Mullins
We find evidence of selective exposure to confirmatory information among 400,000 users on the investor social network StockTwits. Self-described bulls are five times more likely to follow a user with a bullish view of the same stock than are self-described bears. Consequently, bulls see 62 more bullish messages and 24 fewer bearish messages than bears do over the same 50-day period. These “echo chambers”
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Benchmarking Intensity Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-13 Anna Pavlova, Taisiya Sikorskaya
Benchmarking incentivizes fund managers to invest a fraction of their funds assets in their benchmark indexes, and such demand is inelastic. We construct a measure of inelastic demand a stock attracts, benchmarking intensity (BMI), computed as its cumulative weight in all benchmarks, weighted by assets following each benchmark. Exploiting the Russell 1000/2000 cutoff, we show that changes in stocks
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Corporate Capture of Blockchain Governance Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-10 Daniel Ferreira, Jin Li, Radoslawa Nikolowa
We develop a theory of blockchain governance. In our model, the proof-of-work system, the most common set of rules for validating transactions in blockchains, creates an industrial ecosystem with specialized suppliers of goods and services. We analyze the interactions between blockchain governance and the market structure of the industries in the blockchain ecosystem. We show that the proof-of-work
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Are Intermediary Constraints Priced?* Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-09 Wenxin Du, Benjamin Hébert, Amy Wang Huber
Violations of no-arbitrage conditions measure the shadow cost of intermediary constraints. Intermediary asset pricing and intertemporal hedging together imply that the risk of these constraints tightening is priced. We describe a “forward CIP trading strategy” that bets on CIP violations shrinking and show that its returns help identify the price of this risk. This strategy yields the highest returns
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Information versus Investment Rev. Financ. Stud. (IF 8.414) Pub Date : 2022-08-09 Stephen J Terry, Toni M Whited, Anastasia Zakolyukina
We quantify the real implications of trade-offs between firm information disclosure and long-term investment efficiency. We estimate a dynamic equilibrium model in which firm managers confront realistic incentives to misreport earnings and distort their real investment choices. The model implies a socially optimal level of disclosure regulation that exceeds the estimated value. Counterfactual analysis