Essays on the Outcomes, Incentives, and Regulations of Disclosure

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 163 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (891 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on the Outcomes, Incentives, and Regulations of Disclosure by : Joshua Alan Lee

Download or read book Essays on the Outcomes, Incentives, and Regulations of Disclosure written by Joshua Alan Lee and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 163 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: My dissertation examines the outcomes, incentives, and regulations surrounding the voluntary and mandatory disclosure of information by public firms. It contains three chapters. Using earnings conference calls as a prevalent setting to examine voluntary disclosure incentives and outcomes, Chapter 1 examines the market response to firms' scripting answers to questions they expect to receive during the question and answer (Q & A) session of the conference call. I hypothesize that firms script their Q & A responses when future performance is poor to avoid disclosing information that can be used in litigation against the firm or as a means of withholding bad news from investors. I develop a measure of Q & A scripting and find evidence that investors react negatively to scripted Q & A.I also find negative returns in the quarter following scripted Q & A suggesting that investors do not fully incorporate the negative signal into the stock price at the time of the conference call. Lastly, I provide evidence of a negative association between Q & A scripting and unexpected earnings for the two quarters following the conference call, suggesting that the negative reaction to scripted calls is warranted given the realization of negative future outcomes. Chapter 2 then focuses on the incentives for firms to provide disclosures prior to raising capital in seasoned equity offerings. Seasoned equity offerings involve significant information asymmetry between the firm and potential investors. Firms can reduce information asymmetry and the cost of obtaining financing by disclosing detailed plans for how the offering proceeds will be used to generate a return for investors. However, disclosure of forward-looking strategic information is costly. A policy of full disclosure can allow competitors to obtain and use proprietary information to the detriment of the firm or can preclude investors from investing in the offering if they disagree with the chosen strategy of the manager. I argue that managers are likely to disclose only if the expected benefits of disclosure outweigh the expected costs. I expect the benefits of disclosure are the lowest for high-ability managers. High-ability managers can credibly convey firm value at the offering date and enjoy lower levels of information asymmetry. Low-ability managers, on the other hand, cannot credibly convey the value of the offering resulting in high levels of information asymmetry at the time of the offering. I provide evidence that low-ability managers are more likely to disclose plans for the offering proceeds than high-ability managers to reduce information asymmetry and the cost of obtaining funds. Finally, Chapter 3 examines the effect of regulation on the disclosure and reporting decisions of banking institutions. All public firms, including banks, must register their securities with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) if they meet certain thresholds. Registered firms must disclose financial information and adhere to strict reporting requirements. These firms are also subject to regulations such as the Sarbanes Oxley Act, which requires costly attestation of the adequacy of the firm's internal controls. In 2012, the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act loosened the requirements for banks to register with the SEC. The JOBS Act raised the previous registration threshold of 300 shareholders of record to 1,200 shareholders of record, allowing banks with between 300 and 1,200 shareholders of record the opportunity to deregister their securities without incurring the costs of reducing their shareholders of record to be below the prior threshold. Within the first six months following the JOBS Act, 89 banks deregistered from the SEC, which is large given that only 142 banks deregistered over the ten years prior to the Act. We hypothesize that banks deregister to take advantage of private benefits of control. We find that banks deregistering after the Act have significantly lower institutional ownership, more insider trading and insider loans, and do not display significantly lower asset growth. In contrast to positive returns during pre-JOBS Act deregistration announcements, announcement returns for post-JOBS Act deregistrations are insignificant. By reducing the costs of deregistration, the Act likely allowed banks to capture private benefits while increasing the attractiveness of deregistration for higher growth banks.

Two Essays on Investors' Perceptions about Management Disclosures

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 236 pages
Book Rating : 4.E/5 ( download)

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Book Synopsis Two Essays on Investors' Perceptions about Management Disclosures by : Hailan Zhou

Download or read book Two Essays on Investors' Perceptions about Management Disclosures written by Hailan Zhou and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 236 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Three Essays on Corporate Environmental Disclosures and Environmental Performance

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 262 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (111 download)

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Book Synopsis Three Essays on Corporate Environmental Disclosures and Environmental Performance by : Hani Tadros

Download or read book Three Essays on Corporate Environmental Disclosures and Environmental Performance written by Hani Tadros and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page 262 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The objective of this dissertation is to study the incentives of firms to disclose their environmental information and examine the reliability of the information disclosed. To achieve this objective, there is a need to first understand what constitutes environmental disclosures. The first essay, a review of prior disclosure studies, provides a classification of the different types of environmental disclosures and a synopsis about the motivation to disclose each type of information, the reliability and the relevance of the information disclosed to different stakeholders. The outcome of this research shows that many types of environmental information are relevant to the financial and non-financial stakeholders; however, there are still other types of information that needs to be researched to finally achieve a comprehensive framework of environmental disclosures. The second essay examines the association between environmental disclosures and firms’ environmental performances. The study provides a framework to explain the disclosure process demonstrating the effect of economic and legitimacy factors, environmental performance, and the media communicating these disclosures on the amount and type of information reported. The results suggest that environmental reporting is biased; where firms with higher levels of environmental performance disclose more voluntary information while firms with low-environmental performance tend to meet the mandatory disclosure requirements. There is little evidence to suggest that firms with low-environmental performances use their environmental disclosures to maintain the legitimacy of their environmental operations. The third essay examines the reliability of environmental performance indicators disclosed. The results suggest that the reporting of firms’ EPIs might be free of bias as the study finds no association between the information disclosed and firms’ environmental performance. In general, the dissertation provides assurances over the reliability of environmental information disclosed. There is no denial that firms are subject to pressures from non-financial stakeholders to justify the impact of their operations on the environment. This dissertation shows that firms attempt to use their environmental disclosures to mitigate the effects of these pressures; however, it also suggests that the need to legitimize their operations is not the main driver behind the reporting of environmental information.

Three Essays on the Voluntary Disclosure and Managerial Incentive

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (971 download)

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Book Synopsis Three Essays on the Voluntary Disclosure and Managerial Incentive by : Ling Tuo

Download or read book Three Essays on the Voluntary Disclosure and Managerial Incentive written by Ling Tuo and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The importance of an effective corporate communication with all stakeholders including shareholders has been extensively debated in the business literature in the aftermath of 2007-2009 global financial crisis. The key indicator of business value have shifted from accounting profits and stock market performance, formerly, to firm reputation and sustainability performance, currently. Therefore, the transparency and value-relevance of conventional financial reporting has been questioned in terms of its capability to satisfy increasing information needs of all stakeholders. Many doubt whether those traditional financial metrics derived from financial statements can appropriately capture firm & rsquo;s long-term value creation ability. In recent years, users of corporate reports are demanding more relevant financial and non-financial on key performance indicators and forward looking information above and beyond conventional financial statements. To satisfy the demands of information users and decision makers, companies are expected to not only increase their reporting transparency in conventional financial statements but also disclose more inside information to outside public through different types of voluntary disclosure. The first dissertation investigates the role of sustainability report through examining the associations among voluntary disclosure, earnings quality and audit fee. Recently more and more firms begin to release sustainability reports, one important channel of voluntary disclosure, to satisfy the needs of information users and increase the transparency of financial reporting. In this paper, I especially examine the effect of voluntary disclosure quality on those associations. Through Difference-in-Difference test, I find that the release of sustainability report is positively correlated with innate earnings quality and negatively correlated with discretionary earnings quality. Moreover, the positive (negative) correlation between sustainability report and innate (discretionary) earnings quality is more (less) pronounced when the voluntary disclosure quality is high. I also find that the release of sustainability report is associated with higher audit fees and thus it suggests that the sustainability report cannot substitute the traditional financial statement. My conclusions are robust through additional tests of OLS regressions. This paper has important political, academic and industry application. The second dissertation investigates how the firm & rsquo;s cost stickiness strategy is associated with the firm & rsquo;s management earnings forecast (MEF). I conjecture that the managerial incentive regarding the cost strategy and voluntary disclosure strategy are interdependent. When managers choose their cost management, they will also choose the corresponding management earnings forecast strategy to align their interests. Through the empirical tests with a sample between year 2005 and 2011, I find that the firm & rsquo;s level of sticky cost is positively associated with the firm & rsquo;s propensity to issue MEF and the frequency of MEF. Moreover, I find that the firm & rsquo;s level of sticky cost is associated with more good earnings news forecasted by managers. Finally, I find that the relation between cost stickiness and MEF behaviors is more pronounced when the MEF is long-horizon oriented and when the firm efficiency is high. My research builds a link between financial accounting information and managerial accounting information, and also provides new evidence to understand the managerial incentives behind each strategy chosen by managers. This third dissertation investigates how industry peer firms tend to influence the specific firm & rsquo;s voluntary disclosure strategy. Through examining the empirical example of management earnings forecast between 2005 and 2011 and implementing the 2SLS regressions, I find that the specific firm & rsquo;s disclosure frequency, disclosure horizon and the disclosure of bad news are significantly influenced by its peers firms & rsquo; disclosure behaviors. Specifically, the increase in the peers & rsquo; disclosure frequency, disclosure horizon and disclosure of bad news tend to encourage the specific firm to increase its disclosure frequency, disclosure horizon and disclosure of bad news. Moreover, certain firms (such as firms with S & P credit rating, higher profit, larger size or higher market-to-book ratio) tend to be more sensitive to their peer firms & rsquo; voluntary disclosure strategy. Finally, I find that the specific leader-follower relation doesn & rsquo;t exist in the peer effects of disclosure strategy and thus the signaling theory, litigation risk and CEO reputation are more major reasons than herding theory and free rider theory in explaining this phenomenon.

Essays on Accounting Disclosure and the Use of Stock Price in Incentive Contracts

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (696 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Accounting Disclosure and the Use of Stock Price in Incentive Contracts by :

Download or read book Essays on Accounting Disclosure and the Use of Stock Price in Incentive Contracts written by and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis studies the interplay of changes in accounting disclosure and the solution to the stewardship problem. I develop theoretical models that try to explain the different decisions managers, current shareholders, and potential shareholders face. The models incorporate different interdependent aspects of the decision to disclose information, the design of contracts between current shareholders and the corporation’s management, and the aggregation of information into price. My results indicate, for example, that the different interests current and potential shareholders have leads to far reaching impacts of the disclosure of accounting information. The simple statement that more information is always better does not hold and changes of mandatory disclosure can lead to losses for different types of current investors as well as for potential investors.

Essays on Accounting Disclosure and the Use of Stock Price in Incentive Contracts

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 110 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (724 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Accounting Disclosure and the Use of Stock Price in Incentive Contracts by : Mirko Stanislav Heinle

Download or read book Essays on Accounting Disclosure and the Use of Stock Price in Incentive Contracts written by Mirko Stanislav Heinle and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 110 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays in Empirical Disclosure and Compensation Contracting

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 141 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (953 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays in Empirical Disclosure and Compensation Contracting by : Hojun Seo

Download or read book Essays in Empirical Disclosure and Compensation Contracting written by Hojun Seo and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 141 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation is comprised of three essays relating to empirical corporate disclosure and compensation contracting. The first essay examines peer effects in corporate disclosure decisions. I define peer effects as the average behavior of a group influencing an individual group members behavior. Using instrumental variable estimation to eliminate the effects of common shocks, I find that firms are more likely to make disclosures when more peer firms do so, and the marginal effect exceeds that of most firm-specific disclosure determinants studied in the prior literature. I corroborate the existence of peer effects by providing evidence that peer effects are absent when the disclosure is non-discretionary. In cross-sectional tests, I find that peer firm disclosure has a stronger impact on a firms disclosure decisions when the degree of strategic interactions between the firm and its industry peers is higher. I also provide evidence that industry followers respond to industry leaders disclosures but not vice versa. Finally, I examine capital-market effects and find that disclosure motivated by peers is associated with improved stock liquidity. Overall, this study highlights an important disclosure determinant and suggests that peer firm disclosure shapes the corporate information environment. The second essay empirically investigates the Relative Performance Evaluation (RPE) hypothesis in CEO compensation contracts (co-authored with Sudarshan Jayaraman and Todd Milbourn). RPE theory predicts that firms filter out common performance while evaluating CEOs, and that the extent of filtering increases with the number of peers. We hypothesize that inaccurate classification of peers explains prior inconclusive evidence. Following Hoberg and Phillips (2015), we define peers based on 10-K product descriptions and find consistent evidence (i) firms on average filter out common performance, (ii) filtering increases with the number of peers, and (iii) firms completely filter out common performance in the presence of many peers. We conclude that a key identification strategy to testing RPE lies in accurately defining peers. Lastly, the third essay examines the characteristics of management earnings guidance issued right before the compensation committee meetings (co-authored with Xiumin Martin and Jun Yang). Corporate boards determine performance metric for CEOs annual incentive plans at compensation committee meetings at the beginning of a fiscal year. We find that management earnings guidance issued immediately before the meetings tends to be lower than the prevailing consensus analyst forecasts. This downward bias is only present when the performance metric is linked to earnings such as earnings-per-share (EPS). We do not observe downward bias when revenue serves as the performance metric. Also, pessimistic earnings guidance is more pronounced when the prevailing consensus analyst forecast is much more opportunistic. The downward bias is also greater when institutional ownership is more concentrated. Taken together, our findings suggest that managers have incentives to issue pessimistic earnings guidance before compensation committee meetings and that analyst earnings forecasts might serve as an anchor for the compensation committee to defend its choice of performance metric under shareholder pressures.

Essays on Corporate Finance and Disclosure

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (125 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Corporate Finance and Disclosure by : Brian Gibbons

Download or read book Essays on Corporate Finance and Disclosure written by Brian Gibbons and published by . This book was released on 2021 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation contains three essays. In the first essay, I document that disclosure of financially immaterial environmental and social (E&S) information has material effects on firms' investment and financing decisions using the staggered introduction of 87 country-level regulations that mandate firms report such information. Firms domiciled in countries that mandate E&S transparency increase R&D expenditures and patenting activity after disclosing. Transparent non-financial disclosure reduces financing frictions, resulting in more innovation for equity-dependent firms and increased reliance on external equity. It also improves shareholders' contracting and monitoring abilities, incentivizing managers to invest in innovation. Fixed capital investment, which is less sensitive to information frictions, does not change following E&S disclosure. Additionally, I only observe changes to investment and financing decisions when E&S disclosure is mandatory--highlighting the unique value of consistent and comparable disclosure. In the second essay, I study venture capital firms (VCs) use of public market information and how attention to this information relates to their private market investment outcomes. I link web traffic to public disclosure filings hosted on the Security and Exchange Commission's (SEC's) EDGAR server to individual VCs. VCs analyze public information before most deals. An increase in EDGAR filing views relates positively to the probability of an exit through acquisition, suggesting that public information helps identify paths to acquisition. The effect is stronger when the VC has less access to private information. I conclude that policymakers should consider spillover effects on private markets when setting public disclosure requirements. In the third essay, we identify analysts' information acquisition patterns by linking EDGAR server activity to analysts' brokerage houses. Analysts rely on EDGAR in 24% of their estimate updates, with an average of eight filings viewed. We document that analysts' attention to public disclosure is driven by the demand for information and the analysts' incentives and career concerns. We find that information acquisition via EDGAR is associated with a significant reduction in analysts' forecasting error relative to their peers. This relationship is likewise present when we focus on the intensity of analyst research. Attention to public information further enables analysts to provide forecasts for more time periods and more financial metrics. Informed recommendation updates are associated with substantial and persistent abnormal returns, even when the analyst accesses historical filings. Analysts' use of EDGAR is associated with longer and more informative analyses within recommendation reports.

Essays on Capital Markets and Corporate Disclosure

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (951 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Capital Markets and Corporate Disclosure by : Danil A. Borilo

Download or read book Essays on Capital Markets and Corporate Disclosure written by Danil A. Borilo and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis studies how a firm's disclosure decisions are affected by the interaction between prevailing financial reporting regulation and managerial incentives. Chapter 1 summarizes studies related to this thesis. I focus on rules that require a firm to issue regular financial statements. As a result, the release of some information about a firm's performance and financial condition is inevitable. However, since financial statements do not fully reflect all value-relevant information, a firm's manager can still affect the interpretation of this information via voluntary disclosure. In Chapter 2, I study how reputational concerns of a firm's manager affect her voluntary disclosure decisions. I show that interpretation of both the firm's report and voluntarily disclosed information depend on the timing of the disclosure relative to disclosures made by other firms in the same industry. In Chapter 3, I consider the case when private information of the firm's manager cannot be credibly communicated to outside investors and a mandatory financial report is the only available information channel about firm value. As a result, the noisiness of a financial report will lead investors to overvalue some firms and undervalue others. I show that allowing for misreporting can increase social welfare if a firm must rely on external capital in order to finance its investment opportunities. Overall, my results emphasize the importance of taking into account strategic disclosure decisions of managers for regulators, investors, and analysts.

Essays on Asymmetric Information and Environmental Regulation Through Disclosure

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Author :
Publisher : Goteborg University
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 142 pages
Book Rating : 4.3/5 (91 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Asymmetric Information and Environmental Regulation Through Disclosure by : Jorge García

Download or read book Essays on Asymmetric Information and Environmental Regulation Through Disclosure written by Jorge García and published by Goteborg University. This book was released on 2007 with total page 142 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays on Environmental Policies Under Incomplete Enforcement

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 137 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (436 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Environmental Policies Under Incomplete Enforcement by :

Download or read book Essays on Environmental Policies Under Incomplete Enforcement written by and published by . This book was released on 2008 with total page 137 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Essay 1 In this paper I model the optimal monitoring and enforcement strategy when inspection capacity is fixed by budget or manpower constraints. I adopt a leverage enforcement structure that classifies firms into two groups with different enforcement intensities. Optimal monitoring and enforcement requires effective allocation of the fixed number of inspections to the two groups. In each period, a fixed number of firms are selected from each group for inspection, and those with the highest emissions are placed in the targeted group in which the inspection probability is higher. This transition structure induces rankorder tournaments among inspected firms. Once selected for inspection, the emissions of each firm are subject to a standard above which the firm pays a fixed penalty. I find that a regulator facing inspection capacity constraints should leverage the limited inspections by allocating more inspections to the targeted group. In addition, I show that targeting enforcement is generally superior to static enforcement. This is in accordance with findings in the literature. These results are consistent over different ranges of regulatory parameters. Essay 2 We model the optimal design of programs requiring firms to disclose harmful emissions when disclosure yields both direct and indirect benefits. The indirect benefit arises from the internalization of social costs and resulting reduction in emissions. The direct benefit results from the disclosure of previously private information which is valuable to potentially harmed parties. Previous theoretical and empirical analyses of such programs restrict attention to the former benefit while the stated motivation for such programs highlights the latter benefit. When disclosure yields both direct and indirect benefits, policymakers face a tradeoff between inducing truthful self-reporting and deterring emissions. Internalizing the social costs of emissions, such as through a Pigovian tax, will deter emissions, but may also reduce incentives for firms to truthfully report their emissions. Essay 3 This paper investigates the compliance behavior of firms simultaneously regulated under multiple environmental programs. Three possible relationships among regulatory programs are considered: complementarity, substitution and independence. I develop a theoretical model of firm decision making that shows the potential for interrelationships among regulations. I propose an indirect test of the theoretical results and implement the empirical model using data on compliance with Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) for facilities in Michigan that are regulated under both RCRA and Clean Air Act (CAA). Results show evidence of positive cross program effects such that an increase in measures of CAA enforcement intensity lead to increased firm compliance with RCRA; the empirical results are consistent with a complementary relationship between the two programs. Thus coordination is required for optimal monitoring and enforcement strategies.

Essays on Public Finance and Social Media Based Corporate Disclosure

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (119 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Public Finance and Social Media Based Corporate Disclosure by : Anin Rupp

Download or read book Essays on Public Finance and Social Media Based Corporate Disclosure written by Anin Rupp and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The dissertation consists of three chapters that study issues relating to financial regulations and firm disclosure using social media. In the first chapter, I provide an introduction to the dissertation. In the second chapter, my coauthor and I examine whether state pension funds face distorted incentives as a result of the 4Q1986 GASB accounting guidelines which allowed state pension funds to discount liabilities with the expected returns of their investments. We hypothesize that state pension funds increase their equity allocation when faced with regulatory and market shocks and this results in fund underperformance. The empirical results show that as a result of GASB and Black Monday shocks, state pension funds increase their portfolio allocation to equities. Additionally, this increase in equities result in underperformance of their portfolio compared to the benchmark. In the third chapter, my coauthors and I study the informativeness of firms’ tweets, and how quickly markets react to the information embedded within. Utilizing machine learning techniques, we classify firm tweets into six informational categories and study the five minute market reaction. We find that markets react significantly to financial tweets, that is, tweets with information on earnings release, dividends announcements or similar such tweets. We also find that while markets do not react to CSR tweets in general, CSR tweets which contain objective information on CSR expenditure elicit a negative reaction. We further find that market’s reaction to financial tweets is increasing in the institutional shareholding proportion, suggesting that institutional shareholders facilitate the price adjustments to information in firm tweets. In additional tests, we document that market reaction is increasing in the extent of the firm’s perceived information credibility and in the level of the information uncertainty for the firm.

Essays on Disclosure Regulation and Disclosure Decisions

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 0 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (136 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Disclosure Regulation and Disclosure Decisions by : Lucas Gregor Knust

Download or read book Essays on Disclosure Regulation and Disclosure Decisions written by Lucas Gregor Knust and published by . This book was released on 2022 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Three Essays on Economic Consequences of Disclosure Policies

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 0 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (139 download)

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Book Synopsis Three Essays on Economic Consequences of Disclosure Policies by : Tanja Keeve

Download or read book Three Essays on Economic Consequences of Disclosure Policies written by Tanja Keeve and published by . This book was released on 2023 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays on Disclosure Regulation and the Cost of Capital

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 328 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (181 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Disclosure Regulation and the Cost of Capital by : Xiang Cai

Download or read book Essays on Disclosure Regulation and the Cost of Capital written by Xiang Cai and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 328 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays in Regulatory Economics

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 162 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (769 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays in Regulatory Economics by : Santiago Guerrero

Download or read book Essays in Regulatory Economics written by Santiago Guerrero and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page 162 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation consists of three essays. The objective of the essays is to study the impacts of different regulations on the behavior of regulated agents. The first two essays focus on the analysis of non-traditional regulatory policies that complement traditional regulations consisting of inspections and fines for plants that violate regulations. The third essay studies the impacts of the Minimum Legal Drinking Age regulation on alcohol and marijuana consumption. The first essay of this dissertation analyzes the effects of disclosing information online and through the newspapers about Mexican gas stations that cheat the consumer by selling chiquilitros (liters that are less than a true liter). The information about gas stations that commit fraud is revealed through random inspections that the Consumer Protection Agency (PROFECO by its Spanish acronym) conducts on all gas stations in Mexico and is disclosed in PROFECO's website. Newspapers in different municipalities also publish reports with lists of gas stations that are reported by PROFECO as being in violation of regulations. Using data on inspection histories and local news reports, we estimate the impact of disclosing information online and through the newspapers on the probability of future regulatory compliance. Our findings show that disclosing information online significantly improves compliance with regulations. In contrast, newspaper reports are only effective at improving compliance rates for those gas stations that had been found in violation prior to the publication of the reports. One of the main reasons gas stations improve their behavior is that their sales are negatively affected as a result of bad publicity in the newspapers. Using a unique dataset with monthly gasoline sales at the gas station-level, we show that gas stations that were reported in the newspaper reports suffered a loss of sales of 2.2% to 2.4% in the month of the publication. The results suggest that public disclosure of firm's behavior through the media can serve as a complementary tool for inspections and fines in contexts were fines and sanctions are limited. The second essay studies the impacts of self-policing policies to induce environmental audits. State-level statutes in most of the states of the US provide firms that engage in environmental self-audits and that self-report their environmental violations, with a variety of different regulatory rewards, including "immunity" from penalties and "privilege" for information contained in self-audits. These regulations have been controversial in the environmental arena. Critics argue that they provide with incentives to polluters to reduce the level of care, increasing toxic emissions and inspection costs. Proponents argue instead that these regulations can effectively induce more care by polluting plants and lower EPA's enforcement costs. We find that, by encouraging self-auditing, privilege protections tend to reduce pollution and government enforcement activity; however, sweeping immunity protections, by reducing firms' pollution prevention incentives, raise toxic pollution and government inspection oversight. We conclude that self-policing policies that grant limited incentives to firms to self-audit are effective at reducing both toxic emissions and government enforcement effort, whereas those regulations that grant excessive protection by reducing the penalty from disclosed violations, increase both toxic emissions and enforcement costs. The third essay estimates the causal effect of increased availability of alcohol on marijuana use. We exploit the Minimum Legal Drinking Age regulation that restricts the consumption of alcohol for people younger than 21 and compare alcohol and marijuana consumption in individuals just below and just above the age of 21. We show that both the probability and frequency of marijuana consumption decrease sharply at age 21, while the probability and frequency of alcohol intake increase, suggesting that marijuana and alcohol are substitutes. We further find that the substitution effect between alcohol and marijuana is stronger for blacks than whites and for women than men. Overall, our results suggest that policies designed to limit alcohol use have the unintended consequence of increasing marijuana use.

Two Essays on the Effects of External Pressure on Executive Compensation

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Author :
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 139 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (13 download)

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Book Synopsis Two Essays on the Effects of External Pressure on Executive Compensation by : Brandy Elaine Hadley

Download or read book Two Essays on the Effects of External Pressure on Executive Compensation written by Brandy Elaine Hadley and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page 139 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation analyzes the impact of two external forces on executive compensation behavior. In the first chapter, the impact of political sensitivity is investigated as an external force on government contractor executive compensation. Compensation for top executives has come into the political spotlight, especially over the last decade, with many politicians publicly supporting limits on compensation. However, the impact of political scrutiny to limit compensation is debatable. This study analyzes the effect of political scrutiny on CEO compensation using a sample of Federal contractors, which represents a group of firms where politicians yield the most power. Results suggest that Federal contractors with the most visible government contracts that make up significant portions of their revenue have lower CEO compensation, but the efficiency of this compensation structure is debatable as it leaves CEOs with weaker incentives. However, the impact of political sensitivity is muted when the firm has more bargaining power with the government. In the second chapter, the effects of external forces of mandated compensation disclosure and shareholding voting requirements on compensation behavior are examined. Given the lack of guidelines provided for Dodd-Frank mandated Pay for Performance disclosure and the increase in alternative pay definitions used in Pay for Performance discussions, this chapter analyzes the determinants of and the effects on Say on Pay support of disclosing alternative pay measures. Results suggest that firms that disclose alternative pay measures in their Pay for Performance discussions do so for different reasons. Although certain measures are characteristic of opportunistic disclosure and others are indicative of informative disclosure, effects on Say on Pay are similar yet distinct. There is often a significant positive impact of disclosing additional information related to compensation on Say on Pay approval, particularly when combating prior poor Say on Pay support. However, the positive impact on Say on Pay support is most robust when peer comparisons are shared, providing evidence of the value of reporting comparative pay.