Results 141 to 150 of about 51,910 (332)
The Underperformance of Acquiring Mutual Funds: A Re-Examination of a Puzzle
Manel Kammoun, Djerry C. Tandja M.
openalex +2 more sources
Chasing the perfida Albione: Anglo‐Italian productivity gap in the late 1930s
Abstract This paper presents new estimates of Anglo‐Italian labour productivity levels in manufacturing in the late 1930s, derived using the standard single‐deflation approach. The findings confirm a substantial productivity gap between Italy and the United Kingdom at the aggregate level, alongside pronounced intersectoral heterogeneity.
Tancredi Salamone
wiley +1 more source
The Long-Run Underperformance of Post-Listing Stock Returns: The Evidence of Earnings Management
Jane-Raung Philip Lin
openalex +1 more source
Ethical vs. Non-Ethical – Is There a Difference? Analyzing Performance of Ethical and Non-Ethical Investment Funds [PDF]
Ethical investments have become increasingly popular over the past years. Ethical funds restrict their investment based on environmental, social and/or ethical criteria.
Jiri Novak +2 more
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT Introduction Dentistry is a demanding profession, in which the oral health team is subjected to conditions, both intra‐occupational to the profession (extreme and repetitive postures and movements during the working day) and extra‐occupational, related to the demands of the profession (lack of time for basic needs such as diet, physical ...
Victor Lloro Boada +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Dr. Richard E. Newman
doaj +1 more source
Paving the way for incumbents' digital transformation. A review and research agenda
Abstract Digital transformation is reshaping the competitive landscape by forcing incumbent firms to rethink their strategies, organizational structures, and business models. While a substantial body of literature has explored digital transformation in specific sectors, focusing on various factors and organizational mechanisms, there remains a lack of ...
Anna Bastone +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Revisiting Asset Pricing Models: The Case for an Intangibles Factor
ABSTRACT In an increasingly knowledge‐based economy, intangible assets may be an important driver of firm performance and stock returns. We introduce an intangibles intensity factor (INT), distinct from the organization capital factor, and show that exposure to this factor strongly predicts stock returns, outperforming traditional factors.
Dion Bongaerts +2 more
wiley +1 more source

