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Is Financial Capital Globalization the Necessity of Historical Development

Journal of Finance 2000
As an integral part of financial globalization,the globalization of capital flows is influenced by business cycle and trade factors,international interest rate adjustments,capital account management policies,the development of the international monetary system,as well as other factors such as the policy intentions of multinational corporations and relevant international organizations.And it results from the combination of the objective certainties of historical development and the man made driving forces by relevant countries or organizationsThe globalization development process of capital flows is characterized with unprecedented complexity,while the distribution of its benefits is possessed of obvious inequality.However,the complexity and inequality will not influence the objective sustainability of capital globalization development.

Information, Trading, and Product Market Interactions: Cross‐sectional Implications of Informed Trading

Journal of Finance 2008 63(1), 379-413
ABSTRACT I present a simple model of informed trading in which asset values are derived from imperfectly competitive product markets and private information events occur at individual firms. The model predicts that informed traders may have incentives to make information‐based trades in the stocks of competitors, especially when events occur at firms with large market shares. In the context of 759 earnings announcements, I use intraday transactions data to test the hypothesis that net order flow and returns in the stocks of nonannouncing competitors have information content for announcing firms.

Trends in Corporate Governance

Journal of Finance 2005 60(5), 2351-2384 open access
ABSTRACT The popular press and scholarly studies have noted a number of trends in corporate governance. This article addresses, from a theoretical perspective, whether these trends are linked. And, if so, how? The article finds that a trend toward greater board diligence will lead, sometimes through subtle or indirect mechanisms, to trends toward more external candidates becoming CEO, shorter tenures for CEOs, more effort/less perquisite consumption by CEOs (even though such behavior is not directly monitored), and greater CEO compensation. An additional prediction is that, under plausible conditions, externally hired CEOs should have shorter tenures, on average, than internally hired CEOs.

Agency Costs, Risk Management, and Capital Structure

Journal of Finance 1998 53(4), 1213-1243
The joint determination of capital structure and investment risk is examined. Optimal capital structure reflects both the tax advantages of debt less default costs (Modigliani and Miller (1958, 1963)), and the agency costs resulting from asset substitution (Jensen and Meckling (1976)). Agency costs restrict leverage and debt maturity and increase yield spreads, but their importance is small for the range of environments considered. Risk management is also examined. Hedging permits greater leverage. Even when a firm cannot precommit to hedging, it will still do so. Surprisingly, hedging benefits often are greater when agency costs are low.