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Convertible bonds as backdoor equity financing

Journal of Financial Economics 1992 32(1), 3-21 open access
This paper argues that corporations may use convertible bonds as an indirect way to get equity into their capital structures when adverse-selection problems make a conventional stock issue unattractive. Unlike other theories of convertible bond issuance, the model here highlights: 1) the importance of call provisions on convertibles and 2) the significance of costs of financial distress to the information content of a convertible issue.

Robust Measurement of Beta Risk

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1992 27(2), 265 open access
Many empirical studies find that the distribution of stock returns departs from normality. In such cases, it is desirable to employ a statistical estimation procedure that may be more efficient than ordinary least squares. This paper describes various robust methods, which have attracted increasing attention in the statistical literature, in the context of estimating beta risk. The empirical analysis documents the potential efficiency gains from using robust methods as an alternative to ordinary least squares, based on both simulated and actual returns data.

Earnings news and small traders

Journal of Accounting and Economics 1992 15(2-3), 265-302 open access
This study separates trading volume into buyer- and seller-initiated activities and examines the directional volume reaction in small and large trades to different types of earnings news. ‘Good’ (‘bad’) news triggers brief, but intense, buying (selling) in the large trades. However, a persistent period of unusually high buying activity is observed in the small trades irrespective of the news. This anomalous proclivity of small traders to buy is robust across firm size, trading volume, and different earnings expectation models. Several explanations are discussed, although the behavior does not seem fully explained by existing theories.

Herd on the Street: Informational Inefficiencies in a Market with Short-Term Speculation

Journal of Finance 1992 47(4), 1461 open access
Standard models of informed speculation suggest that traders try to learn information that others do not have. This result implicitly relies on the assumption that speculators have long horizons, i.e, can hold the asset forever. By contrast, we show that if speculators have short horizons, they may herd on the same information, trying to learn what other informed traders also know. There can be multiple herding equilibria, and herding speculators may even choose to study information that is completely unrelated to fundamentals. These equilibria are informationally inefficient.

More like each other than anyone else? A cross-cultural study of entrepreneurial perceptions

Journal of Business Venturing 1992 7(5), 419-429 open access
This article examines the idea that there is a basic set of beliefs that entrepreneurs hold about themselves and about others in their society that, from the perspective of the entrepreneur, differentiate the two. The article suggests that this set of beliefs transcends cultures, and that these perceived differences may be linked to entrepreneurial activity. Analysis of survey responses from over 700 entrepreneurs in nine countries found that even among culturally very different societies there is a core set of perceptions, common across countries, that entrepreneurs hold about others in their countries. This supports the first two parts of the proposition, and suggests that entrepreneurial behavior may indeed stem from a pervasive set of entrepreneurial beliefs.

Global financial markets and the risk premium on U.S. equity

Journal of Financial Economics 1992 32(2), 137-167 open access
There is a significant foreign influence on the risk premium for U.S. assets. Using a bivariate GARCH-in-mean process, we find that the conditional expected excess return on U.S. stocks is positively related to the conditional covariance of the return of these stocks with the return on a foreign index but is not related to its own conditional variance. Further, we are unable to reject the international version of the CAPM. We present evidence for different model specifications, multiple-day returns, and alternative proxies for foreign stock returns.

An Empirical Comparison of Alternative Models of the Short-Term Interest Rate

Journal of Finance 1992 47(3), 1209 open access
We estimate and compare a variety of continuous-time models of the short-term riskless rate using the Generalized Method of Moments. We find that the most successful models in capturing the dynamics of the short-term interest rate are those that allow the volatility of interest rate changes to be highly sensitive to the level of the riskless rate. A number of well-known models perform poorly in the comparisons because of their implicit restrictions on term structure volatility. We show that these results have important implications for the use of different term structure models in valuing interest rate contingent claims and in hedging interest rate risk.