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Effects of initial coin offering characteristics on cross-listing returns
Digital Finance, 2020The low level of regulation and publication requirements in cryptocurrency markets leads to little information on cryptocurrency projects being publicly available.
A. Meyer, Lennart Ante
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Listing Gaps, Merger Waves, and the New American Model of Equity Finance
Social Science Research Network, 2019The US listing gap—an abnormal decline in the number of stock market listings relative to other countries—is often interpreted as a warning sign for the US public equity markets.
G. Lattanzio, W. Megginson, A. Sanati
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The financing behaviour of listed Chinese firms
The British Accounting Review, 2006This paper examines the corporate financing behaviour of listed companies in the People's Republic of China. Our results suggest that some determinants of firm leverage (e.g., size, asset tangibility, growth opportunities and profitability) commonly cited in studies on developed economies also appear to be important in China.
Xiao, JZ, Zou, H
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Policy Uncertainty and Innovation: Evidence from Initial Public Offering Interventions in China
Management Sciences, 2021Public equity is an important source of risk capital, especially in China. The Chinese government has occasionally suspended IPOs, exposing firms already approved to IPO to indeterminate listing delays.
L. Cong, Sabrina T. Howell
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Ownership and Financing Structures of Listed and Large Non‐listed Corporations
Corporate Governance: An International Review, 2006In this paper, we use a large firm‐level dataset covering 19 European countries in order to compare the ownership and financing structures and performance of listed (LCs) and large non‐listed companies (NLCs). For the overall sample, we find that the substantial majority of NLCs have either a large or medium blockholder.
Claessens, S., Tzioumis, K.
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FINANCING FOR INNOVATION OF CHINESE LISTED FIRMS
The Singapore Economic Review, 2017Using a panel data of listed companies, this paper studies how internal financing and external financing affect the innovative investment of Chinese industrial enterprises. It finds that internal fund is the primary source of financing for the innovative investment undertaken by Chinese nonfinancial firms and the role of external financing varies in ...
Ju Xiaosheng, Chen Jiao, Tan Qi
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Financing constraints and US cross‐listing
Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences / Revue Canadienne des Sciences de l'Administration, 2014AbstractThis study investigates whether relaxation of firms' financial constraints is an important outcome of the US cross‐listing mechanism. We use the association between investment spending and cash flow to test for the presence and importance of firms' financing constraints.
Ahmed Marhfor+3 more
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Corporate Governance Reforms and Cross‐Listings : International Evidence†
Contemporary Accounting Research, 2021In this study, we examine whether a country’s implementation of major corporate governance reforms affects firms’ cross-listing activities. Using a difference-in-differences (DID) research design, we find that following the implementation of corporate ...
Chih-Hsien Liao+3 more
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Stock-financed M&As of newly listed firms
Small Business Economics, 2015Newly listed firms are increasingly active in mergers and acquisitions (M&As). The “stock as currency” motivation explains why firms engage in stock-financed acquisitions after their Initial Public Offering (IPO). We extend its implications by focusing on the role played by stock liquidity, which entails potential benefits not only for prospective ...
Signori, Andrea, Vismara, Silvio
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, 1999
Non-U.S. firms cross-listing shares on U.S. exchanges as American Depositary Receipts earn cumulative abnormal returns of 19 percent during the year before listing, and an additional 1.20 percent during the listing week, but incur a loss of 14 percent ...
Stephen R. Foerster+23 more
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Non-U.S. firms cross-listing shares on U.S. exchanges as American Depositary Receipts earn cumulative abnormal returns of 19 percent during the year before listing, and an additional 1.20 percent during the listing week, but incur a loss of 14 percent ...
Stephen R. Foerster+23 more
semanticscholar +1 more source