17 results on '"Dragana Cvijanovic"'
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2. Measuring Uncertainty in Illiquid Markets
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Dragana Cvijanovic, Stanimira Milcheva, and Alex Van de Minne
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
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3. Impact of Institutional Investors on Real Estate Risk
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Alex Van de Minne, Stanimira Milcheva, and Dragana Cvijanovic
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Stochastic volatility ,Market risk ,Capital (economics) ,Institutional investor ,Economics ,Real estate ,Monetary economics ,Business and International Management ,Discount points ,Empirical evidence ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Abstract
Private real estate markets have experienced signi ficant in inflows of institutional capital over the last couple of decades. In this paper we seek to understand what are the implications of this recent development. Employing a generalized Hamiltonian Monte Carlo Bayesian procedure we find novel empirical evidence that market entry by large institutional investors predicts higher uncertainty and greater noise in real estate prices in the short and medium run, and lower longitudinal risk in the long run. Our findings point to a signi ficant eff ect of institutional capital, which serves as a catalyst for structural changes in real estate market risk.
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- 2021
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4. Does Climate Change Affect Investment Performance? Evidence from Commercial Real Estate
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Dragana Cvijanovic and Alex Van de Minne
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,business.industry ,Risk premium ,Climate change ,Real estate ,Climate Finance ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Renting ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Asset (economics) ,Business and International Management ,Predictability ,business ,Investment performance ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Combining granular data on temperatures across the continental US with micro-level commercial real estate (CRE) data from 1991 to 2020, we study the impact of exposure to extreme temperature shocks on investment performance of CRE at the individual asset level. We find that exposure to extreme temperatures significantly reduces average realized total returns in CRE. This result is driven by reduction in asset returns. We do not observe a significant effect of income return. We document substantial variation in sensitivity to temperature shocks across property types. Our results seem to be driven by shocks to time-varying CRE risk premium due to decreased predictability of future rental income.
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- 2021
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5. Opioid Crisis and Real Estate Prices
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Dragana Cvijanovic, Moritz Wiedemann, and Claudia Custodio
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Long lasting ,Health economics ,Residential real estate ,Opioid ,Negative relationship ,Economics ,Juvenile delinquency ,medicine ,Real estate ,Percentage point ,Demographic economics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This paper estimates the impact of opioid abuse on real estate prices. We exploit the variation in opioid prescriptions induced by the staggered passage of state laws intending to limit the abuse of opioids. We document a long-term negative relationship between opioid prescriptions and residential real estate prices. For a one standard deviation change in prescriptions we find a 1.36 percentage points change in home values over the following 5 years. We also estimate a positive increase in home prices of 0.54 and 0.91 percentage points respectively in the first and second years following the passage of these laws. One im- portant factor driving this relationship are changes in mortgage delinquency rates. Overall, our results are consistent with opioid abuse having significant long lasting negative economic effects that are mitigated if opioid supply is limited.
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- 2020
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6. The Wall Street Stampede: Exit As Governance with Interacting Blockholders
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Konstantinos E. Zachariadis, Amil Dasgupta, and Dragana Cvijanovic
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HB Economic Theory ,Economics and Econometrics ,History ,HG Finance ,Polymers and Plastics ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Corporate governance ,Institutional investor ,Equity (finance) ,Monetary economics ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Hedge fund ,Incentive ,Accounting ,Capital asset pricing model ,Business ,Herding ,Business and International Management ,Finance - Abstract
In firms with multiple blockholders governance via exit is affected by how blockholders react to each others' exit. Institutional investors, who hold the majority of equity blocks, are heterogeneous in their incentives. How do these incentives affect the manner in which institutional blockholders respond to each others' exit? We present a model that shows that open-ended institutional investors, who are subject to investor redemption risk, will be sensitive to an informed blockholder's exit, giving rise to correlated exits and strengthening governance. Thus, exposure to redemption risk, universally a negative force in asset pricing, plays a positive role in corporate governance. Using data on engagement campaigns by activist hedge funds we present large-sample evidence consistent with our theoretical mechanism.
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- 2019
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7. Information Asymmetries, Financial Constraints and Institutional Investment: Evidence from the Real Estate Market
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Stanimira Milcheva, Dragana Cvijanovic, and Alex Van de Minne
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Bayes estimator ,Laplace's method ,Debt ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economics ,Econometrics ,Price premium ,Real estate ,Random effects model ,Discount points ,Size premium ,media_common - Abstract
Employing an efficient Bayesian estimation procedure, Integrated Nested Laplace Approximation (INLA), we find evidence of Investor Size Premium. Controlling for investor skill, financing constraints, and prior market knowledge, as well as property and time-varying location specific factors and property random effects, we find that larger buyers tend to pay a significant price premium relative to smaller buyers, for the otherwise identical property. Debt plays a role for the length of the holding period. These results point to a significant role of intrinsic valuations and the role of bargaining intensity and can explain why real estate markets are highly segmented.
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- 2019
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8. Ties That Bind: How Business Connections Affect Mutual Fund Activism
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Amil Dasgupta, Konstantinos E. Zachariadis, and Dragana Cvijanovic
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Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Financial economics ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Accounting ,Affect (psychology) ,Shareholder ,Voting ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Portfolio ,050207 economics ,business ,Proxy voting ,Finance ,Business ties ,Mutual fund ,media_common - Abstract
We investigate whether business ties with portfolio firms influence mutual funds' proxy voting using a comprehensive data set spanning 2003 to 2011. In contrast to prior literature, we find that business ties significantly influence promanagement voting at the level of individual pairs of fund families and firms after controlling for Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) recommendations and holdings. The association is significant only for shareholder-sponsored proposals and stronger for those that pass or fail by relatively narrow margins. Our findings are consistent with a demand-driven model of biased voting in which company managers use existing business ties with funds to influence how they vote. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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9. Intergenerational finance: parental housing wealth and children’s financial outcomes
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Steffen P. Sebastian, Lingxiao Li, Dragana Cvijanovic, and David H. Downs
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Home equity ,Finance ,Further education ,Collateral ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Equity (finance) ,Purchasing ,Financial information ,Debt ,Economics ,Parental investment ,business ,media_common - Abstract
In this paper I study the effect of changes in the value of parental housing wealth during children’s teenage years on the parental and children’s financial outcomes and consumption patterns later in life. Increases in the value of home equity when children are teenagers affect the parents’ ability to finance children’s further education as well as other expenditures. In particular, appreciating house prices increase the value of housing equity, which in turn can increase parental investment in their children’s education due to a “wealth” effect, or because the value of their collateral to be used for financing college debt has increased. By using parental and their children’s demographic and financial information from the Panel of Income Dynamics (PSID), I investigate how increases in the housing value just before children turn 18, affect their indebtedness levels later in life, their likelihood of purchasing a house and their predominant choice of financing house purchases, as well as their consumption choices. In particular, I study whether these intergenerational wealth transfers operate through relaxation of financing constraints (the collateral channel), or through increases in wealth (the wealth channel).
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- 2018
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10. 'We'll Always Have Paris': Out-of-Country Buyers in the Housing Market
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Christophe Spaenjers, Dragana Cvijanovic, Groupement de Recherche et d'Etudes en Gestion à HEC (GREGH), Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC Paris)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Economics, Tilburg University [Netherlands], and HEC Research Paper Series
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JEL: R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics/R.R2 - Household Analysis/R.R2.R21 - Housing Demand ,Ceteris paribus ,bargaining ,Real estate ,Monetary economics ,Market timing ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,JEL: R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics/R.R3 - Real Estate Markets, Spatial Production Analysis, and Firm Location/R.R3.R31 - Housing Supply and Markets ,JEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D1 - Household Behavior and Family Economics/D.D1.D12 - Consumer Economics: Empirical Analysis ,Information asymmetry ,Demand shock ,JEL: R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics/R.R2 - Household Analysis/R.R2.R23 - Regional Migration • Regional Labor Markets • Population • Neighborhood Characteristics ,Search cost ,Economics ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,information asymmetries ,Asset (economics) ,foreign home buyers ,JEL: G - Financial Economics/G.G1 - General Financial Markets/G.G1.G12 - Asset Pricing • Trading Volume • Bond Interest Rates ,secondary residences - Abstract
Previous research has shown that non-local household investors make sub-optimal asset selection and market timing decisions. However, in real estate markets, heterogeneity in returns can exist even with identical ex ante investment (timing) choices, given that transaction prices are the outcome of a complex search-and-bargaining process. Analyzing notarial data for the Paris housing market, we find that “out-of-country” buyers indeed buy at higher prices and resell at substantially lower prices than local investors, ceteris paribus. Furthermore, our evidence suggests that this pattern is not due to higher search costs and information asymmetries, but instead stems from wealth-related differences in bargaining intensity. Finally, we estimate the causal effect of out-of-country demand shocks on property prices in Paris to be positive but small.
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- 2018
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11. Free-Riders and Underdogs: Participation in Corporate Voting
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Konstantinos E. Zachariadis, Dragana Cvijanovic, and Moqi Groen-Xu
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Microeconomics ,Actuarial science ,Free rider problem ,Counterfactual conditional ,Shareholder ,Shareholder resolution ,Corporate governance ,Voting ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economics ,Unobservable ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,media_common - Abstract
Voting outcomes can differ from underlying preferences due to selection into voting. One source of such selection is lower participation of shareholders with popular preferences (free-rider effect) relative to that of those with unpopular preferences (underdog effect). We illustrate these strategic effects in a rational choice model in which the voting participation decision depends on the probability of being pivotal and the costs and benefits of voting. Based on the model, we structurally estimate unobservable shareholder preferences in US data. We show that strategic selection into voting is relevant: 13% of voting outcomes in shareholder governance proposals represent the minority.
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- 2017
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12. Changing of the Guards: Does Succession Planning Matter?
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Dragana Cvijanovic, Nickolay Gantchev, and Sunwoo Hwang
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Succession planning ,Business and International Management ,business ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2017
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13. When Pay for Luck is Pay for Action: CEO Compensation and Real Estate Prices
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Claudia Custodio, Dragana Cvijanovic, and Benjamin Bennett
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Empirical research ,Executive compensation ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Luck ,Action (philosophy) ,Financial economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MathematicsofComputing_GENERAL ,Real estate ,Business ,media_common - Abstract
We use changes in real estate prices to study the sensitivity of CEO compensation to luck and to responses to luck. Pay for luck might be optimal when CEOs are expected to react to luck. To identify responses to luck, we rely on the fact that accounting performance, unlike market performance, only reflects current real estate prices if the CEO responds to shocks. We show that CEO compensation is linked to responses to real estate luck, which explains pay for luck itself. Our results cast doubts on existing evidence of pay for luck as empirical support of the managerial power hypothesis.
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- 2015
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14. Ties that Bind:How business connections affect mutual fund activism
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Dragana Cvijanovic, Amil Dasgupta, and Konstantinos Zachariadis
- Abstract
We investigate how business ties with portfolio firms influence mutual funds’ proxy voting using a comprehensive dataset spanning 2003 to 2011. In sharp contrast to the prior literature, we show that the proxy voting of mutual funds is significantly influenced by their business ties with portfolio firms. Our result holds at the level of individual proposals after robustly controlling for unobserved heterogeneity across firms and fund families and over time as well as for the e?ects of ISS recommendations and fund family holdings. We also show that the influence of business ties on proxy voting is strongest for highly contested shareholder proposals where proxy votes are most relevant for firm value. Finally, we show that the prominent class action lawsuits of 2006 against 401(K) sponsors and providers had di?erential e?ects on the voting of di?erent fund families depending on whether they were sued, thus unearthing a potential link between investor attention and corporate governance.
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- 2014
15. How Did US Banks React to Capital Losses Induced by Real Estate Prices?
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Vicente Cuñat, Dragana Cvijanovic, and Kathy Yuan
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Demand shock ,Real estate investment trust ,Capital (economics) ,Capital requirement ,Real estate ,Financial system ,Balance sheet ,Business ,Market liquidity ,Capitalization rate - Abstract
By considering banks as portfolios of assets in different locations, we study the transmission of negative real estate shocks across bank’s business areas and geographical locations while controlling for local demand shocks and bank location–specific factors. Affected banks recognize capital losses and cut lending across the board indicating contagion across business lines and locations. They also roll over and fail to liquidate problematic loans, in addition to reducing their operational costs and depleting their liquidity. These results provide evidence of bank balance sheet transmission and amplification of real estate shocks.
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- 2013
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16. Real Estate Prices and Firm Capital Structure
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Dragana Cvijanovic
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Identification (information) ,Capital structure ,Collateral ,Debt ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Value (economics) ,Economics ,Price elasticity of supply ,Real estate ,Monetary economics ,health care economics and organizations ,Standard deviation ,media_common - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of real estate prices on firm capital structure decisions. For a typical US listed company, a one standard deviation increase in predicted value of firm pledgeable collateral translates into a 3 percentage points increase in firm market leverage ratio. The identification strategy employs a triple interaction of MSA level land supply elasticity, real estate prices and a measure of a firm's real estate holdings as an exogenous source of variation in firm collateral values. Firms significantly change their debt structure: they increase their bank but also arm's length financing and they decrease more expensive types of debt in response to collateral value appreciation. These results indicate the importance of collateral values in mitigating potential informational imperfections.
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- 2013
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17. Real Estate Prices and Firm Capital Structure
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Dragana Cvijanovic, Groupement de Recherche et d'Etudes en Gestion à HEC (GREGH), Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC Paris)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and Haldemann, Antoine
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Economics and Econometrics ,[SHS.GESTION.FIN] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration/domain_shs.gestion.fin ,Capital structure ,Financial economics ,Collateral ,media_common.quotation_subject ,collateral ,debt capacity ,Price elasticity of supply ,Real estate ,[SHS.GESTION.FIN]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration/domain_shs.gestion.fin ,Listed company ,Real Estate Prices ,Accounting ,Debt ,Capital Structure ,Value (economics) ,Business ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
Job Market Paper; This paper examines the impact of real estate prices on fi rm capital structure decisions. I find that for a typical US listed company, a one percent increase in collateral value translates into a 0.12 percent increase in total leverage. My identi cation strategy employs a triple interaction of MSA level land supply elasticity, aggregate real estate price changes and a measure of a firms real estate holdings as an exogenous source of variation in the value of fi rm collateral. I fi nd that for every one percent increase in collateral value, a fi rms annualized cost of long-term debt drops by four basis points. More financially constrained fi rms tilt their debt structure towards arms length fi nancing, less information sensitive debt and longer-term debt maturities in response to collateral value appreciation. These results indicate the importance of collateral values in mitigating potential informational imperfections. More financially constrained fi rms use collateral-induced borrowing proceeds for financing new investment and for equity payouts.
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- 2011
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