Two Essays in Venture Capital Financing

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 206 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (458 download)

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Book Synopsis Two Essays in Venture Capital Financing by : João de Almada Moreira Rato

Download or read book Two Essays in Venture Capital Financing written by João de Almada Moreira Rato and published by . This book was released on 2000 with total page 206 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays on Entrepreneurial Finance and Venture Capital

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 0 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (135 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Entrepreneurial Finance and Venture Capital by : Sungjoung Kwon

Download or read book Essays on Entrepreneurial Finance and Venture Capital written by Sungjoung Kwon and published by . This book was released on 2020 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In the first essay, I examine what motivates young startup firms to rely on external intellectual property rights. While startups are better suited to exploration than exploitation, I find that approximately 10% of VC-backed companies acquire external patents while still private. They are neither low-quality firms nor firms with low patent output, lending little support to the hypothesis that patent acquisition is a response to low productivity. Rather, patent litigation risk appears to play an important role. Startup firms are significantly more likely to buy external patents when they are sued for patent infringement or exposed to a high threat of litigation. Using a difference-in-differences design around the Supreme Court decision Alice Corp. vs. CLS Bank, I show that firms whose patent litigation risks are reduced the most become significantly less likely to buy patents. Consistent with these findings and with the litigation risk preventing firms from reaching their full potential, firms buying patents are significantly less likely to go public. The second essay (with Michelle Lowry and Yiming Qian) examines mutual fund investments in private firms. Historically, a key advantage of being a public firm was broader access to capital, from a disperse group of shareholders. In recent years, such capital has increasingly become available to private firms as well. We document a dramatic increase over the past twenty years in the number of mutual funds participating in private markets and in the dollar value of these private firm investments. We evaluate several factors that potentially contribute to this trend: firms seeking extra capital to postpone public listing, mutual funds seeking higher risk-adjusted returns and initial public offering (IPO) allocations, and venture capitalists (VCs) seeking new investors to substantiate higher valuations. Results provide the strongest support for the first two factors. The final essay explores potential conflicts of interest in venture capital investments. VC firms occasionally make investments in startups founded by their own employees. The agency hypothesis predicts that this practice is motivated by conflicts of interest-VCs pursue their private benefits by financing themselves or coworkers. Alternatively, the information hypothesis posits that VCs are utilizing their networks-the connection with founders enable VCs to better evaluate the prospects of the venture. Using historical employment data in Crunchbase, I identify connections between entrepreneurs and VC firms. My findings provide strong support for the information hypothesis. Startups raising financing from connected VCs outperform their peers in the long run. VCs exhibit superior investment performance from connected deals, and these deals generate higher demand from other VCs as well. Finally, VCs making investments in connected startups are better able to raise follow-on funds. In sum, my findings suggest that, in the venture capital industry, private benefits from self-dealing is not sufficient enough to outweigh reputation concerns and/or the potential financial compensation from investing in better companies.

Essays on International Venture Capital

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 150 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (13 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on International Venture Capital by : Arash Soleimani Dahaj

Download or read book Essays on International Venture Capital written by Arash Soleimani Dahaj and published by . This book was released on 2017 with total page 150 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Venture Capital firms (VCs), compared with other sources of financing, are known to be a value-adding source of finance for high-growth entrepreneurial firms. Venture capital has transitioned from a local to an international subject in recent years. In this thesis , I address three important aspects of the international venture capital research area. In the first essay, I answer these questions: do venture capital firms decide to invest in a cross-border company based solely on their own international experience, or do they also decide based on other venture capital firms' behaviour in investing in that country? I address these questions by investigating vicarious and experiential learning in the venture capital context, focusing on US cross-border venture capital investment data from 2000 to 2013. The analysis indicates that, on average, venture capital firms use both experiential and vicarious learning strategies in making their cross-border investment decisions. Moreover, the effect of experiential learning is greater than that of vicarious learning, and a venture capital firm's size moderates this effect. In the second essay, I answer this question: do government venture capital funds crowd-in or crowd-out international private venture capital investment? The crowding-in effect arises when international private venture capital benefits from government subsidies through the enhancement of an entrepreneurial ecosystem and investment syndication. The crowding-out effect arises when government venture capital competes with private venture capital, bidding up deal prices and lowering returns, thereby spurring local private venture capitalists to invest internationally. I examine data from 26 countries from 1998 to 2013. The analysis indicates that, on average, more mixed-structured government venture capital investments than pure-structured government investments in a country crowds-in domestic and foreign private venture capitalists internationally. Moreover, the effect of both structures is greater on domestic private venture capitalists than on foreign ones. In the third essay, I investigate whether government venture capital practices in Canada promote a robust entrepreneurial ecosystem, by analyzing the effect of these practices on domestic and cross-border venture capital investments by private venture capital firms separately. I research the following two questions in parallel: a) Does Canadian government venture capital investment attract private venture capital firms to invest in the domestic market? b) Does Canadian government venture capital investment lead to, or prevent, domestic private venture capital firms from investing in other countries? I find that Canadian government venture capital investment has no measurable impact on private venture capital firms' decisions to invest in the domestic market. I also find that certain of the Canadian government's venture capital programs have displaced private venture capital, although with negligible impact, towards cross-border VC markets, primarily to the United States.

VC

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Publisher : Harvard University Press
ISBN 13 : 0674988000
Total Pages : 401 pages
Book Rating : 4.6/5 (749 download)

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Book Synopsis VC by : Tom Nicholas

Download or read book VC written by Tom Nicholas and published by Harvard University Press. This book was released on 2019-06-03 with total page 401 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: From nineteenth-century whaling to a multitude of firms pursuing entrepreneurial finance today, venture finance reflects a deep-seated tradition in the deployment of risk capital in the United States. Tom Nicholas’s history of the venture capital industry offers a roller coaster ride through America’s ongoing pursuit of financial gain.

Two Essays in Finance

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Publisher : Universal-Publishers
ISBN 13 : 1581120044
Total Pages : 144 pages
Book Rating : 4.5/5 (811 download)

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Book Synopsis Two Essays in Finance by : Ward R. Kangas

Download or read book Two Essays in Finance written by Ward R. Kangas and published by Universal-Publishers. This book was released on 1997-10 with total page 144 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Based on data on publicly traded insurance firms, the first essay examines questions about the effect of large catastrophic events on insurance firms. Rather than looking at a single event, thirty catastrophic events were aggregated into quintiles and the cumulative abnormal returns around these events were found to be significantly positive over a 25 day trading window. There is no significant evidence that post-catastrophic stock returns are correlated to the magnitude of the catastrophe. The second essay analyzes the effect of a large land grant university, the University of Illinois, on the State Treasury of Illinois. If the State Treasury were acting as its own agent trying to maximize revenues, would it choose higher education as an investment versus other alternative investments. While it is true the State makes large expenditures for the operations of the University, it is also true that individuals receiving degrees on average receive higher incomes. Taxes or higher incomes offset the cost of operating the University. The study is broken out by the level of student: undergraduate, masters, doctorate, medical professional, and by function of the University. It was found that all levels of education have a positive return not only for the individual, but also for the State Treasury. This is in excess of any non-pecuniary benefits to the State of having a better educated population, or the local taxation effects on the county or city where the campus is located. These returns are found to be higher than other types of investments.

Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (11 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance by : Roy Kenneth Roth

Download or read book Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance written by Roy Kenneth Roth and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this dissertation, I study how the structure and conventions of the venture capital market affect the behavior of both investors and entrepreneurs. The venture capital market is characterized by high-risk investments with the potential for extreme rewards. The current structure and conventions of the market have developed at least in part to mitigate the level of risk faced by the investors. Characteristics of the market include convertible preferred securities, staged investment and board representation for investors among other features. In the first chapter of this dissertation, I study the effects of stage financing on effort provision and firm value, weighing the advantages of upfront financing against the incentive to misuse the capital for personal reasons. In the second chapter, I study how the use of convertible preferred securities and board representation affect the level of risk chosen by venture capital-backed firms. Both chapters primarily deal with the market structure as given, thus, the focus of this dissertation is on understanding the effects of the current market structure on real decision-making, rather than providing justification for observed conventions. In so doing, I uncover insights not previously available and meaningfully contribute to the existing literature. In the first chapter, I explore the optimal staging path for venture capital-backed companies. Staging investment allows a portion of the risk inherent to financing new ventures to be mitigated, as some portion of the needed funds can be withheld until after initial progress is realized. As a result, companies that show poor intermediate signals can be abandoned, saving investors from likely losses. Additionally, despite investors' representation on the board of directors, some misbehavior by the entrepreneur may not be preventable ex-post. Hence, there is value in limiting the amount of capital that the entrepreneur has access to while the firm is young and opaque, as this limits the amount that can be misused. These factors create a motive for stage financing. However, providing a larger amount of capital upfront can also provide flexibility and operational efficiencies that increase the potential value of the project. Weighing these effects against each other leads to an internal optimum level of staging, where some capital is provided upfront but a portion is withheld until further information is revealed and the firm matures. The entrepreneur's preferred level of capital raised initially exceeds the level that maximizes the value of the firm. I further explore how the solution changes when the entrepreneur disagrees with investors over the likely value of the project. Specifically, I study how the solution is affected when the entrepreneur is more optimistic about the distribution of project outcomes than are investors. This creates two separate effects that oppose each other. On one hand, optimistic entrepreneurs are less likely to misbehave and waste capital, lowering the cost of providing capital upfront and increasing the optimal amount raised initially. On the other hand, optimists believe that the price they can get for their equity will be higher in the future, increasing the perceived cost of upfront financing and decreasing its optimal level. I illustrate that in low information settings the former effect dominates while in high information settings the latter dominates. These findings provide insight into the staging decision not previously available. In Chapter 2 I focus on the incentives for risk-taking facing both entrepreneurs and investors. In venture capital financing, investors take convertible preferred stock which is senior to the common stock held by the entrepreneurs. Traditional economic logic would then imply that the entrepreneur has a stronger incentive for risk-taking than does the investor, by virtue of the security design. However, I show that this is not always the case. I explore how the incentives of the decision-making investors, the general partners of venture capital funds, are affected by the fact that they manage funds of other peoples money. Hence, their compensation profile is not linearly related to fund value. In particular, general partners are compensated with a mixture of fixed and performance sensitive income. I show that the performance sensitive component, carried interest, introduces a kink into the payoffs of the general partners which induces a preference for risky strategies in certain situations. My model predicts two key scenarios where, despite holding a senior security, general partners are more risk-seeking than entrepreneurs. First, general partners are risk-seeking late in the life cycle of their funds if prior performance has been poor. This is similar to the "gambling for resurrection'' effect in firms near default. Furthermore, in many cases, the possibility of future poor performance is sufficient to induce the GP to prefer high-risk strategies even early in the life of the fund, before intermediate progress has been realized. These findings are empirically relevant and shed light on which parties are the driving forces behind the level of risk selected by startup firms.

Three essays on venture capital contracting

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Publisher : Rozenberg Publishers
ISBN 13 : 9051709471
Total Pages : 181 pages
Book Rating : 4.0/5 (517 download)

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Book Synopsis Three essays on venture capital contracting by : Ibolya Schindele

Download or read book Three essays on venture capital contracting written by Ibolya Schindele and published by Rozenberg Publishers. This book was released on 2005 with total page 181 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Three Essays on Venture Capital Finance

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (871 download)

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Book Synopsis Three Essays on Venture Capital Finance by : Jeffrey Scott Kobayahsi Peter

Download or read book Three Essays on Venture Capital Finance written by Jeffrey Scott Kobayahsi Peter and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Venture capital finances high-risk, high-return projects. In addition to financing, venture capitalists provide advice and expertise in management, commercialization, and development that enhance the value, success, and marketability of projects. Venture capitalists also have skills in selecting projects with potentially high returns. The first chapter investigates the contracting relationship between venture capitalists and entrepreneurs in a setting where the venture capitalist and entrepreneur contribute intangible assets (advice and effort) to a project that are non-contractible and non-verifiable. In general, in the private market equilibrium, advice provided by the venture capitalist and the number of projects funded are lower than the social optimum. Government tax and investment policies may alleviate these market failures. The impact of a capital gains tax, a tax on entrepreneur's revenue, an investment subsidy to venture capitalists, and government run project enhancing programs are evaluated. Finally, we analyze the effects of a government venture capital firm competing with private venture capital. The second chapter focuses on competition in venture capital markets. We model a three-stage game of fund raising, investment in innovative projects and input of advice and effort, where fund raising is used as an entry deterrence mechanism. We examine the impacts of taxes and subsidies on venture capital market structure. We find that a tax on venture capitalist revenue and a tax on entrepreneur revenue increase the likelihood of entry deterrence and reduce the number of projects funded in equilibrium. A subsidy on investment reduces the likelihood of entry deterrence and increases the number of projects funded. The third chapter examines the venture capitalist's choice of investment in project selection skills and investment in managerial advice. We model, separately, a private venture capitalist and a labour-sponsored venture capitalist (LSVCC) with different objectives. A LSVCC is a special type of venture capitalist fund that is sponsored by a labour union. The private venture capitalist maximizes its expected profits, while the LSVCC maximizes a weighted function of expected profits and returns to labour. Consistent with empirical evidence, the quality of projects, determined by project selection skills and managerial advice, is higher for the private venture capitalist.

Essays on Entrepreneurial Finance

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (825 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Entrepreneurial Finance by : Hyunsung Daniel Kang

Download or read book Essays on Entrepreneurial Finance written by Hyunsung Daniel Kang and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: My dissertation is focused on developing a better understanding of the technology and innovation strategies of corporations and their impacts on firm performance. I am particularly interested in corporate venture capital (CVC), which serves as a strategy for accessing external technology for corporate investors and as an alternative source of financing and complementary assets for start-ups. I have investigated the conditions under which corporate investors and start-ups achieve the strategic goals by establishing CVC ties, and on estimating the technological and financial gains created by the CVC ties. Specifically, I have concentrated on when and where CVC ties are established in order to maximize economic value. The former relates to a timing issue, whereas the latter is a space issue of CVC investments. In the first essay, I examine corporate investors' decisions to establish CVC ties and their subsequent strategic actions. Consistent with the real options perspective on CVC investments, I find that CVC investments can help corporate investors effectively search for and select future acquisition or licensing partners by reducing asymmetric information and uncertainty that may characterize markets for technology. Specifically, CVC investments facilitate the external acquisition of technology by substituting for a corporate investor's absorptive capacity, as reflected by its upstream research capabilities. CVC investments instead complement the portfolio of internally generated new products, since they allow highly productive corporate investors to shift their focus onto exploratory initiatives with the objective of selecting future technology and partners. Finally, CVC investments facilitate exploratory investments in distant technological areas that are subsequently integrated through licensing or acquisitions. These findings contribute to emerging research on the organization and financing patterns of external R & D activities. In the second essay, I investigate the nature of the relationship between technological spillovers and capital gains created by CVC investments for corporate investors. Using a simple equilibrium model and data from the global bio-pharmaceutical industry between 1986 and 2007, I find that these technological spillovers and capital gains are complements. This complementarity is enhanced when CVC investments are made in post-IPO and technologically diversified start-ups. Beyond providing a broad benchmark for heterogeneous returns on CVC investments, this study has important implications for corporate investors and start-ups. In particular, to the extent that capital gain is greatly determined by changes in the market values of start-ups, it implies that CVC investments can create value for start-ups as well as corporate investors. These mutual benefits can be greatly determined by when (e.g., post-IPO start-ups) and where (e.g., technologically diversified start-ups) CVC investments are made. In the third essay, I analyze the contextual factors that impact the probability of start-ups' obtaining financing through independent venture capitalists and corporate investors. The systematic empirical evidence based on a three-stage game theoretic model suggests that start-ups that possess better evaluated technology tend to be financed through independent venture capitalists, rather than corporate investors. In contrast, start-ups tend to be financed through corporate investors, rather than independent venture capitalists, when their intellectual properties are effectively protected and their research pipelines contain multiple products. These findings provide a theoretical basis to explain why several types of investors co-exist in the entrepreneurial financing market. Moreover, the existence of such determinants indicates that, although investors traditionally have been viewed as the powerful partner that dominates the investment decision, start-ups are also active decision makers in investment ties.

Essays in Venture Capital

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 274 pages
Book Rating : 4.F/5 ( download)

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Book Synopsis Essays in Venture Capital by : Laura Lindsey

Download or read book Essays in Venture Capital written by Laura Lindsey and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page 274 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance and Strategy

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 105 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (957 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance and Strategy by : Sharat Raghavan

Download or read book Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance and Strategy written by Sharat Raghavan and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page 105 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation analyzes contracts and organizational form decisions in the empirical setting of venture capital investments. The first chapter asks how entrepreneurs and venture capital investors are affected by a specific design feature of investment contracts. Participating preferred rights, which are venture capital contract terms that give investors returns greater than their intrinsic ownership, are used extensively despite possible deleterious effects on founder incentives. Using a novel data set of venture capital investment contracts from 2004-2009, I ask three fundamental questions about these rights: when are they used, who uses them, and what are their consequences? The findings indicate that (i) lower inflows of venture capital funding increase the use of participating preferred rights; (ii) less experienced investors and certain industry sectors utilize participating preferred rights more often; and (iii) firms with participating preferred rights are less likely to raise a subsequent financing at a higher valuation and less likely to exit through an IPO or acquisition, suggesting that the incentive implications of these rights may affect firm performance. These results are robust to specifications that attempt to control for the endogeneity of the contract right. The findings provide important insights for entrepreneurs and investors who are weighing the consequences of certain contractual forms. The second chapter broadens the analysis to other contractual rights to asks how investors and entrepreneurs allocate ownership and venture capital investment rights in competitive markets. Using the same data set of venture capital financings from 2004-2009, I find that changes in market competition, or venture capital supply, affect contractual terms in significant ways. Competition not only affects firm valuations, but how actual firm ownership is divided between entrepreneurs and investors. Additionally, certain contractual rights shift in response to venture capital scarcity. Specifically, the results suggest that (i) entrepreneurs own more of the firm in periods of high venture capital inflows, (ii) entrepreneurs give up cash flow rights in periods of low venture capital inflows, and (iii) the incidence of control rights are not significantly affected by venture capital inflows. Similarly, the results are robust to specifications that attempt to control for the endogeneity of venture capital inflows. The third chapter (co-authored with Eric J. Allen) focuses on a potential inefficiency of organizational design, specifically when a startup chooses to organize as a C-corporation rather than as a limited liability company (LLC). We examine the previously documented anomaly of loss-generating startup firms organizing as C-Corporations, as opposed to the theoretically more tax efficient alternative - the LLC. While prior research examines the potential reasons for this divergence between theory and practice, this is the first study that actually attempts to quantify the foregone tax benefits incurred by the current system. We examine a sample of venture backed firms that reached the Initial Public Offering stage between 1996 and 2008. We find that the vast majority of these firms have accumulated tax losses at issuance, on average $33 million, and that the associated potential tax benefit is significant. We also examine a subsample of firms that were, at one time, organized as pass-through entities prior to going public. We find that, while the majority switched to the C-Corporate form upon the entrance of a venture capital investor, a small number were allowed to retain their pass-through status until issuance. Their existence provides further evidence that the alternative form's lack of adoption must be attributable to some aspect other than technical limitations that would prevent venture capital investment.

Managing the Commercialization of New Technologies: Essays on Venture Capital Financing and Entrepreneurial Strategies

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (973 download)

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Book Synopsis Managing the Commercialization of New Technologies: Essays on Venture Capital Financing and Entrepreneurial Strategies by : Martin Würmseher

Download or read book Managing the Commercialization of New Technologies: Essays on Venture Capital Financing and Entrepreneurial Strategies written by Martin Würmseher and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Essays on Angel Investors and Early-stage Startups

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (18 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays on Angel Investors and Early-stage Startups by : Buvaneshwaran Venugopal

Download or read book Essays on Angel Investors and Early-stage Startups written by Buvaneshwaran Venugopal and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation contains three essays on angel investors and early-stage startups. In the first essay, I show that social connections between angels and entrepreneurs, obtained via schools, past employment and ethnicity, positively influence investment decisions of angels, and the subsequent performance of startups. Social connections, irrespective of the ranking of schools or employers in which they were formed, are crucial for securing early-stage financing, particularly in markets with higher information asymmetry. Connected seed-stage startups are more likely to survive longer, raise more series A funds and attract venture capital investments than their unconnected peers. In the second essay, we show that syndication is widespread in the angel investment market, even among seed-stage startups. Angels that successfully lead seed-stage startups to the next financing stage experience an increase in the quantity, quality, and geographic spread of their co-investment connections relative to their unsuccessful peers, and are rewarded with more new investment opportunities, both as lead investors and participants. Success begets more success, making it more likely that other seed-stage startups of a successful angel also progress to the next financing stage. Overall, our results highlight that reputation for good performance enhances the network capital of angel investors. In the third essay, we investigate the board formation decisions of early-stage startup firms and how these decisions relate to future performance. An individual is more likely to be appointed as the first outside director if he/she is a seed-stage investor, shares a past professional connection with the founders, or possesses expertise not possessed by the founders. All else equal, a start-up is more likely to attract future directors and future investors that share a past professional connection with the early-stage director. Overall, start-ups that form early-stage boards raise larger amounts in later-stage rounds, are more likely to attract funding from prominent investors and venture capitalists, and are more likely to exit successfully especially through IPOs. All these effects are stronger if the early-stage director is also a seed-stage investor in the startup, except that investor-directors lower the likelihood of exit through the IPO route.

Two Essays on Crowdfunding and Consumer Returns

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 0 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (141 download)

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Book Synopsis Two Essays on Crowdfunding and Consumer Returns by : Dan Liu

Download or read book Two Essays on Crowdfunding and Consumer Returns written by Dan Liu and published by . This book was released on 2023 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: During my childhood, my family owned a small convenience store that served members of our community. However, our family business had to close because of customers who failed to pay. I find that small businesses tend to be more susceptible to unexpected internal and external forces than their larger counterparts. Small businesses constitute the economy's lifeblood, but they obviously need more help and support than large companies. I am thus interested in researching the funding-related and operational difficulties that small retailers and startups face and especially what I can do to help them survive these challenges.My first dissertation research focuses on how crowdfunding platforms can help protect economically struggling entrepreneurs during the COVID-19 pandemic. Crowdfunding is a new technology platform providing access to two parties: entrepreneurs and SMEs who launch campaigns to collect money and funders who visit the platform and decide whether to support the project. Despite only being around since 2009, crowdfunding has become a popular entrepreneurship financing option and is catching up to traditional financing channels like venture capital. I propose that such a fast-growing online technology platform offers a vital financing resource for financially constrained entrepreneurs during the pandemic. My empirical analysis results confirm my proposition that the number of funders, the size of their contributions, and their total investment amounts all increased with the increased severity of COVID-19, challenging the existing belief that a crisis has a negative effect on entrepreneurship financing. I further examine that one plausible reason for funders' increasing investment demand is altruism-- funders are more willing to support and help entrepreneurs to bring their projects to life when they are struggling financially due to COVID-19. This result is consistent with current findings about the altruistic nature of funders noted in the literature. However, on the supply side, entrepreneurs have reduced their project-launching activities despite more financing opportunities on the demand side. I therefore urge entrepreneurs to launch new ventures to tap into crowdfunding resources. My second dissertation paper focuses on consumers' response to a product failure: product returns. Many retailers treat product returns as an evil because returns hurt their bottom line. However, researchers have pointed out recently that a return serves as another customer touchpoint to enhance consumer relationships. A superior return experience can turn angry, frustrated customers into happy ones so that they increase their purchases in the future. While existing research focuses on the overall effect of returns on future consumer purchases, I question whether this effect applies to all returns. I classify consumer returns based on the reason for the return-the wrong size, not liking the item, disappointment with the quality, and other reasons. Then I examine how the reason for the return impacts future consumer purchases. My regression results suggest that only sizing returns increase the likelihood of consumer repurchases. In contrast, items returned because the consumer doesn't like the product decrease consumer repurchases and returns based on quality concerns do not significantly affect consumer repurchases. I explain my results based on the attribution theory: customers return reasons influence how they blame a seller and then how they respond. For example, sizing returns, at least partially, can be self-ascribed to consumers because consumers' body dimensions- height, chest size, waist size, and so on-vary significantly, and so designing a product to fit everyone can be challenging. Due to self- attribution, customers tend to have a lower initial dissatisfaction caused by a return event, which a redress process (id est, a good return experience) can easily recover. Our paper contributes to consumer return literature by addressing the rarity of return-reason-related research. We also provide important managerial insights to improve retailers' return service recovery practices and customer value evaluation using return reason data.

Essays in Corporate Venture Capital

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Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 290 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (611 download)

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Book Synopsis Essays in Corporate Venture Capital by : Vladimir Ivanov Ivanov

Download or read book Essays in Corporate Venture Capital written by Vladimir Ivanov Ivanov and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page 290 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Entrepreneurial Finance

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Publisher : Cambridge University Press
ISBN 13 : 1108421350
Total Pages : 647 pages
Book Rating : 4.1/5 (84 download)

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Book Synopsis Entrepreneurial Finance by : Luisa Alemany

Download or read book Entrepreneurial Finance written by Luisa Alemany and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2018 with total page 647 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Academics and practitioners from a range of institutions across Europe provide a cutting-edge, practical, and comprehensive review on the financing of entrepreneurial ventures. From sourcing and obtaining funds, to financial tools for growing and managing the financial challenges and opportunities of the startup, Entrepreneurial Finance: The Art and Science of Growing Ventures is an engaging text that will equip entrepreneurs, students and early-stage investors to make sound financial decisions at every stage of a business' life. Largely reflecting European businesses and with a European perspective, the text is grounded in sound theoretical foundations. Case studies and success stories as well as perspectives from the media and from experts provide real-world applications, while a wealth of activities give students abundant opportunities to apply what they have learned. A must-have text for both graduate and undergraduate students in entrepreneurship, finance and management programs, as well as aspiring entrepreneurs in any field.

Three Essays in Empirical Corporate Finance

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ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (122 download)

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Book Synopsis Three Essays in Empirical Corporate Finance by : Chang Jie Hu

Download or read book Three Essays in Empirical Corporate Finance written by Chang Jie Hu and published by . This book was released on 2020 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "The core of the thesis includes three essays in empirical corporate finance. The first essay examines the relation between mandatory disclosure behavior and legal accountability. In this study, we treat the enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) in 2002 as a regulatory event that increases the legal accountability of top executives and compute the filing tones for a large sample of Forms 10-Q and 10-K filings between 1994 and 2017 using textual analysis. We document that the changes in filing tones contain substantial information that is reflected promptly in the capital market. We also show that a structural break exists in the distribution of filing tones around SOX. Firms use a more negative tone in their quarterly mandatory disclosure after SOX. Interestingly, investors exhibit a stronger reaction to per unit change of filing tones during the post-SOX era and we show that changes in investors’ reactions are not merely driven by the systematic changes in tone distribution after SOX. We also document that filing tones are determined by common performance measures, but such relation is weakened after SOX. The second essay studies the impact of the exit of Venture Capitalists (VCs) on innovation by comparing VC backed IPO firms with the non-VC backed. VCs play a significant role in bringing new ventures public by providing financing and consistent monitoring. Prior literature has established mostly a positive correlation between VCs and firm innovation because VCs may preselect more innovative firms to begin with. This study hopes to provide evidence on causal inference with reasonable assumptions from a “reverse treatment” perspective by examining the change in innovation when VCs exit. We treat the initial public offering (IPO) as a proxy for VC’s exit since most VCs exit shortly after IPO due to their limited investment horizon. Using a difference-in-differences framework, we find that VC-backed firms experience a greater drop in Research and Development (R&D) intensity after IPO-exits when compared to those non-VC backed. The third essay revisits the long-debated relation between market competition and firm innovation. While traditionally competition is measured at the industry level with historical data, our study utilizes two new text-based measures of competitive threats developed by Hoberg et al. (2014) and Li et al. (2013) which are both firm-specific and forward-looking. We address the potential endogeneity concerns using instrumental variables along with the propensity score matching of firms that experience an exogenous shock from import competition with those that do not. Our results show that an increase in competition unambiguously promotes firm innovation"--