Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice

One of the main tenets of finance is diversification. Investors choose their portfolios so as to diversify away their idiosyncratic risk. In four essays included into this dissertation the implications of less than perfect diversification on investors’ performance and asset pricing are investigated....

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Main Author: Bodnaruk, Andriy
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Handelshögskolan i Stockholm, Finansiell Ekonomi (FI) 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hhs:diva-514
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7258-682-6
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-hhs-5142013-01-08T13:07:37ZEssays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choiceengBodnaruk, AndriyHandelshögskolan i Stockholm, Finansiell Ekonomi (FI)Stockholm : Economic Research Institute, Stockholm School of Economics (EFI)2005UnderpricingInvestor recognitionLimited stock market participationRepurchasesLong-run performanceEvent-studyLocal biasInformation asymmetry.FamiliarityIPOsDiversificationAsset pricingIncomplete informationEconomic geographyFinansiering-- företagInvesteringarBörsintroduktionEconomicsNationalekonomiOne of the main tenets of finance is diversification. Investors choose their portfolios so as to diversify away their idiosyncratic risk. In four essays included into this dissertation the implications of less than perfect diversification on investors’ performance and asset pricing are investigated. In Essay I we examine one particular instance in which diversification may play a role in a non-portfolio type of investment: the IPO. In an IPO, a set of potentially non-diversified investors – the existing shareholders – reduce their holdings of a company, listing the company and selling part of its shares. Our contribution is to show how portfolio diversification of controlling investors in private companies affects the IPO process. We demonstrate that companies sold by more diversified shareholders are less likely to be taken public, but when doing so they are priced more favourably. In Essays II and III we investigate the impact of incomplete diversification and imperfect risk-sharing on asset returns. Our argument is that the smaller shareholder base a firm has, the larger the fraction of company idiosyncratic risk on average its investors have to carry, and the higher return they would demand for that. We demonstrate that there is a negative and significant relationship between companies’ shareholder base and stock returns as well as between changes in shareholder base and stock returns. This effect is more pronounced for younger companies, but remains significant for seasoned companies as well. Applying our analysis to corporate events we demonstrate that abnormal performance following the repurchase can be partially explained by the reduction in the shareholders base resulting from repurchase. In Essay IV I investigate the motives behind one of the most puzzling examples of investors’ underdiversification – the local bias. Contrary to the predictions of classical financial theories, investors on aggregate overweight stock of proximate companies in their portfolios. I demonstrate that being placed in new community, individual investors not only soon become biased towards companies with establishments in this new locality, but they also obtain superior returns from these investments. Investing into the local stocks, therefore, is to a large degree rational. Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögskolan, 2005 S. ii-vi: sammanfattning, s. 1-134: 4 uppsatserDoctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hhs:diva-514urn:isbn:91-7258-682-6application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Underpricing
Investor recognition
Limited stock market participation
Repurchases
Long-run performance
Event-study
Local bias
Information asymmetry.Familiarity
IPOs
Diversification
Asset pricing
Incomplete informationEconomic geography
Finansiering-- företag
Investeringar
Börsintroduktion
Economics
Nationalekonomi
spellingShingle Underpricing
Investor recognition
Limited stock market participation
Repurchases
Long-run performance
Event-study
Local bias
Information asymmetry.Familiarity
IPOs
Diversification
Asset pricing
Incomplete informationEconomic geography
Finansiering-- företag
Investeringar
Börsintroduktion
Economics
Nationalekonomi
Bodnaruk, Andriy
Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
description One of the main tenets of finance is diversification. Investors choose their portfolios so as to diversify away their idiosyncratic risk. In four essays included into this dissertation the implications of less than perfect diversification on investors’ performance and asset pricing are investigated. In Essay I we examine one particular instance in which diversification may play a role in a non-portfolio type of investment: the IPO. In an IPO, a set of potentially non-diversified investors – the existing shareholders – reduce their holdings of a company, listing the company and selling part of its shares. Our contribution is to show how portfolio diversification of controlling investors in private companies affects the IPO process. We demonstrate that companies sold by more diversified shareholders are less likely to be taken public, but when doing so they are priced more favourably. In Essays II and III we investigate the impact of incomplete diversification and imperfect risk-sharing on asset returns. Our argument is that the smaller shareholder base a firm has, the larger the fraction of company idiosyncratic risk on average its investors have to carry, and the higher return they would demand for that. We demonstrate that there is a negative and significant relationship between companies’ shareholder base and stock returns as well as between changes in shareholder base and stock returns. This effect is more pronounced for younger companies, but remains significant for seasoned companies as well. Applying our analysis to corporate events we demonstrate that abnormal performance following the repurchase can be partially explained by the reduction in the shareholders base resulting from repurchase. In Essay IV I investigate the motives behind one of the most puzzling examples of investors’ underdiversification – the local bias. Contrary to the predictions of classical financial theories, investors on aggregate overweight stock of proximate companies in their portfolios. I demonstrate that being placed in new community, individual investors not only soon become biased towards companies with establishments in this new locality, but they also obtain superior returns from these investments. Investing into the local stocks, therefore, is to a large degree rational. === Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögskolan, 2005 S. ii-vi: sammanfattning, s. 1-134: 4 uppsatser
author Bodnaruk, Andriy
author_facet Bodnaruk, Andriy
author_sort Bodnaruk, Andriy
title Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
title_short Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
title_full Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
title_fullStr Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
title_full_unstemmed Essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
title_sort essays in empirical corporate finance and portfolio choice
publisher Handelshögskolan i Stockholm, Finansiell Ekonomi (FI)
publishDate 2005
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hhs:diva-514
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7258-682-6
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