References Flashcards

All the references for CM

1
Q

Blanchard and Watson 1982

A

Explanation for bubbles - grow at a rational profit maximising rate before collapsing back at 1-q rate. excludes negative bubbles or multiple bubbles

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2
Q

Van norden and Shaller 1999

A

periodic partially collapsing bubbles with a time varying probability of collapse - mathematical models explain investors are maximising and shirt selling - they are periodic. In extreme cases they are irrational

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3
Q

Kindleberger 2012

A

Not periodic supports irrationality, factors such as bank credit, financial innovation and displacement are linked to bubble formation which are random events. Minsky model

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4
Q

Aragon 2007

A

Hedge funds are highly illiquid, alpha is a liquidity premium - reward fr being highly illiqyid

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5
Q

Sadka 2010

A

Santa effect - higher returns in December significantly higher than other months, only for liquid funds.

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6
Q

Hasanhodzic and lo 2007

A

liquidity, back fill bias, survivorship bias and tail events, changing factor loadings

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7
Q

Anderson et al 2016

A

hedge funds change their factor loadings as they are adaptable not transparent so can change their portfolio composition during bad times to reduce exposure to elements of risk.

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8
Q

roell 1996

A

why firms go public - equity capital cashing in, liquidity and lower cost of capital

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9
Q

ritter 1987

A

why they don’t - expensive Costa if admin, agency and stewardship

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10
Q

ibbotson et al 1994

A

the costs of underwriting are 18% money left on the table

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11
Q

chemmanur and Fulghieri 1999

A

disperse ownership after growth - venture capitalist is undiversified, higher info costs of selling privately so go public to access broader market and it’s benefits to a large company

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12
Q

lucas and macdonald 1990

A

market timing theories - asymmetric info is why firms go public as they can sell their stock over priced, price run ups have been empirically observed. Issues follow a market rise.

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13
Q

Pagano et al 1998

A

higher book value to market value me likely to go public - shows heavy investment then go public because this puts their price up

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14
Q

ibbotson 1975 and Ritter and Welch 2002

A

underpricing costs shown by a positive 11% gain in first day. 2-6 months is efficient. R and W show 70% IPOS up on first day

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15
Q

Hanley 1993

A

Bookbuilder theory - assumes demand is understated so underwriters don’t fully adjust their prices upwards to keep price on low side to stop investor clients from understating demand

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16
Q

Ritter and Welch 2002

A

Equally weighted portdolio of IPOS 1990-2001 significantly underperformed the market. Value weighted portfolio did much better in this period.

17
Q

Miller 1977

A

reasons for underperformance - heterogenous expectations causes the price to deviate as the market cannot decide (volatility) and short selling constraints stop IPOS from being arbitrage to find the mean price as they have no historic price data.

18
Q

jensen and ruback

A

tender 30 4

merger 20 0

19
Q

loughran and vijh 1997

A

acquirers 18.5
acquirers unfriendly cash 62
acquirers using stock -24
all acquirers -6.5

20
Q

Harford 2005

A

economic regulatory technological

21
Q

shell and texeco

A

example of merger industry concolidation

22
Q

Hayward and hawbrick 1997

A
recent share performance 
board vigilance
media praise ceo
ceo self importance
subjective
23
Q

schleifer and vishny 2003

A

stock market misvaluations and managers act rationally towards it

24
Q

Rhodes et al

A

merger activity correlated with high valuations

25
Q

twitter

A

ipod at 26 but closed at 45- underpricing

26
Q

vonage

A

easier to apply reassure on public companies - vonage failed to take ipo orders from customers but still charged them