Results 281 to 290 of about 746,632 (385)
Measuring Sovereign Risk: Are CDS Spreads Better than Sovereign Credit Ratings?
Iván M. Rodríguez +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Degradation of Access‐Based Business Models: Customer Misbehavior and Shared Mobility
ABSTRACT Access‐based services are considered one of the strategies to embed sustainability in business models. Yet, because the evolution of these business models has been overlooked, we do not know whether their promise to create triple value is sustained.
Andres Camacho, Carmen Valor
wiley +1 more source
Sustainability and Sovereign Credit Ratings in Emerging Markets: Nigeria as a Case Study
Allan Dwyer
openalex +1 more source
Private equity renewable energy investments in India. [PDF]
Gandhi HH, Hoex B, Hallam BJ.
europepmc +1 more source
Green Talk, Costly Walk: The Financial Cost of Greenwashing
ABSTRACT This study investigates the financial consequences of greenwashing, operationalized as the misalignment between ESG disclosure and actual ESG performance. While prior research has explored the reputational and ethical dimensions of greenwashing, its impact on firms' cost of debt remains underexamined.
S. Taddeo, A. Regoli, O. Weber, R. Carè
wiley +1 more source
Time-Varying Dependence in Sovereign and Bank Credit Spreads: Evidence from Europe
Christian Meine
openalex +1 more source
SA-FLIDS: secure and authenticated federated learning-based intelligent network intrusion detection system for smart healthcare. [PDF]
Bensaid R +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Current Trends and Future Research in Management Control for Sustainability in Retail
ABSTRACT The growing emphasis on sustainability in the retail sector, driven by regulatory frameworks, market trends and consumer demand, has placed management control at the forefront of facilitating sustainability practices. Despite increasing academic interest in this area, the literature is fragmented and provides limited sector‐specific insight ...
Miguel Gil, Mart Ots, Timur Uman
wiley +1 more source
Sovereign credit risk spillover
This thesis examines cross-market correlations between means and variances in sovereign credit markets and captures the presence of any contagion effect by focusing on parallel movements between markets in the wake of the recent crisis. Furthermore, it focuses on the effect of policy interventions on the dynamics of these correlations.\ud \ud First, to
openaire

