Two Essays in Financial Economics

Chapter 1 of this study investigates the link between a firm’s capital structure and their industry competitive behavior. Given the competitive behavior in certain markets, Cournot or Bertrand, we investigate if there are any inborn characteristics of these markets’ competitive behavior that would c...

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Main Author: Goss, Line Valerie
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UNO 2014
Subjects:
ADR
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1920
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2984&context=td
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spelling ndltd-uno.edu-oai-scholarworks.uno.edu-td-29842016-10-21T17:07:08Z Two Essays in Financial Economics Goss, Line Valerie Chapter 1 of this study investigates the link between a firm’s capital structure and their industry competitive behavior. Given the competitive behavior in certain markets, Cournot or Bertrand, we investigate if there are any inborn characteristics of these markets’ competitive behavior that would create an incentive for Cournot firms to have a different strategic debt level than Bertrand firms. Related theories argue that any industry’s competitive behavior, whether it is Bertrand or Cournot would typically consist of a certain type of debt and pursue a certain type of competitive strategy, based on its classification. In this study, we investigate the debt level of a sample of firms classified into either Cournot or Bertrand competition, i.e. explore competitive behavior as a characteristic of firms that tend to be associated with different debt ratios and determine if the competitive market type does in fact lead to a varying debt ratio target. We used two different measures to categorize competition type, the CSM and the SI measure. Our findings indicate that there is no significant difference between differentiated debt levels between Bertrand and Cournot firms. Chapter 2 of the study examines various factors that may affect American Depository Receipts’ trading volume distribution between their home and US markets. These include factors not previously considered in the extant literature. One such factor is the trading motive (hedging or speculative) of investors. Other factors examined include price impact, relative volatility, market to book ratio, as well as a cultural dimension factor: individualism. Controlling for time-specific effects, we find that the relative motive measure of cross-listed firms has a positive relationship on the trading volume distribution. In addition, when looking at a small sample of firms with different motive factors, we find that hedging motive in the home country leads to an increased proportion of trading in the host country relative to the home country, while speculative motive leads to a decrease in the volume share of the host country relative to the home country. A positive and significant relationship is also observed between volatility and the log of trading volume share. The relationship is negative for liquidity and visibility in relation to the trading volume distribution of cross-listed firm’s stocks. Culture difference at home relative to host is found to positively impact trading volume distribution of cross-listed stocks. 2014-12-18T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1920 http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2984&context=td University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations ScholarWorks@UNO Cournot Bertrand ADR Leverage Capital Structure Cross-listing Economics Finance Social and Behavioral Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cournot
Bertrand
ADR
Leverage
Capital Structure
Cross-listing
Economics
Finance
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Cournot
Bertrand
ADR
Leverage
Capital Structure
Cross-listing
Economics
Finance
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Goss, Line Valerie
Two Essays in Financial Economics
description Chapter 1 of this study investigates the link between a firm’s capital structure and their industry competitive behavior. Given the competitive behavior in certain markets, Cournot or Bertrand, we investigate if there are any inborn characteristics of these markets’ competitive behavior that would create an incentive for Cournot firms to have a different strategic debt level than Bertrand firms. Related theories argue that any industry’s competitive behavior, whether it is Bertrand or Cournot would typically consist of a certain type of debt and pursue a certain type of competitive strategy, based on its classification. In this study, we investigate the debt level of a sample of firms classified into either Cournot or Bertrand competition, i.e. explore competitive behavior as a characteristic of firms that tend to be associated with different debt ratios and determine if the competitive market type does in fact lead to a varying debt ratio target. We used two different measures to categorize competition type, the CSM and the SI measure. Our findings indicate that there is no significant difference between differentiated debt levels between Bertrand and Cournot firms. Chapter 2 of the study examines various factors that may affect American Depository Receipts’ trading volume distribution between their home and US markets. These include factors not previously considered in the extant literature. One such factor is the trading motive (hedging or speculative) of investors. Other factors examined include price impact, relative volatility, market to book ratio, as well as a cultural dimension factor: individualism. Controlling for time-specific effects, we find that the relative motive measure of cross-listed firms has a positive relationship on the trading volume distribution. In addition, when looking at a small sample of firms with different motive factors, we find that hedging motive in the home country leads to an increased proportion of trading in the host country relative to the home country, while speculative motive leads to a decrease in the volume share of the host country relative to the home country. A positive and significant relationship is also observed between volatility and the log of trading volume share. The relationship is negative for liquidity and visibility in relation to the trading volume distribution of cross-listed firm’s stocks. Culture difference at home relative to host is found to positively impact trading volume distribution of cross-listed stocks.
author Goss, Line Valerie
author_facet Goss, Line Valerie
author_sort Goss, Line Valerie
title Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_short Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_full Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_fullStr Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_full_unstemmed Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_sort two essays in financial economics
publisher ScholarWorks@UNO
publishDate 2014
url http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1920
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2984&context=td
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