36 results on '"CAPITAL allocation"'
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2. Steering the Belt and Road's Energy Mix: A Steering Theory Perspective on Chinese Energy Investments in Pakistan and Indonesia.
- Author
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HANNES GOHLI
- Subjects
- *
BELT & Road Initiative , *INVESTMENTS , *CAPITAL allocation , *PROJECT finance , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
This article contributes to discussions on why Chinese investments in Pakistan cover a wide variety of energy sectors, whereas capital allocation in Indonesia is concentrated in a narrow set of actors and energy sources (coal). While others have highlighted micro-, macro-, and meso-level dimensions, this research looks at the Chinese Ministry of Commerce's (MOFCOM) communication as a further factor to steer Chinese project financing. By exposing a set of 281 MOFCOM statements to quantitative and qualitative discourse analysis, my findings reveal that MOFCOM publications offer more incentives for private participation in Pakistan than in Indonesia, as represented by the greater number of actors and projects listed, as well as the types of public policy instruments deployed. Besides theoretical contributions to steering theory, the study offers practical suggestions on how China can diversify investments to create more sustainable energy outcomes along the Belt and Road. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Role of Financial Development in Economic Growth using WPM Method.
- Author
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Kalra, Geetika and Patle, Roshani
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,CAPITAL allocation ,INVESTMENTS ,FINANCIAL crises ,BANKING industry - Abstract
Financial development is possible investments creating information about and allocation of capital, monitoring of companies and corporate administration, commerce, diversification and risk management, accumulation and accumulation of savings, exchange of goods and services in activities like facilitation includes improvements. provided by financial institutions economic theory, at best and efficient financing institutions-banks, stock markets and bond markets-which capital it's for high production applications paying is for economic growth beneficial. development of developing Asia strong to retain and efficient financial systems particularly important are because the performance of the investment as a driver of the region's development reduces the amount of investment. Since the early 1990s the region's financial systems are deep and diversified data indicate. 125 countries more formal econometrics on panel data quantitative analysis, financial development significant in development positive effect confirms having, especially in developing countries. of financial development in the development of the region impact than elsewhere significantly different thatno, for the asian financial crisis since then its influence has weakened the results also indicate that financial intermediaries, these teachers are bankers finance in the weakness of the sector effect of liberalization Is it a temporary effect will check that, that is, in the following years only this is observed. beginning of liberalization. this is not the case. of the banking sector weaknesses will only become apparent over time. however, in developing countries financial Liberalization Policy as an important part of the reform has Among some researchers, it is about virtues reflects overall confidence financial liberalization is that of the banking sector lead to weakness significant factor is, also of economics status even after controlling that there is this effect they found, the first one below income in the area earning funds summarize the implications the first one below review the area we do. income, cost and Savings, investment and wealth accumulation financial statements of we briefly reviewed do. The second division financial institutions orrole of intermediaries deals with The third section income, interest and money conventional theories about funding for real development between growth and development for important contacts enough attention that he did not pay some theoretical adaptations proposes and argues. The purpose of this paper is tofield-projectseveral in conjunction with the detain determinations and measurement perceived at a distance water using data for productivity mapping (WPM)methods and protocols is to create. Stock Market Investments, Real Estate Investments, Cryptocurrency Investments, Peer-to-Peer Lending and Startups and Venture Capital. Risk Management, Return on Investment (ROI), Portfolio Diversification and Costs and Fees. the Ranking of Financial development. Real Estate Investments is got the first rank whereas is the Cryptocurrency Investments the Lowest rank. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. The climate and land use change nexus: Implications for designing adaptation and conservation investment strategies in Sub‐Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Bosma, Charissa and Hein, Lars
- Subjects
INVESTMENT policy ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,CAPITAL allocation ,FOREST conservation ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Climate change and land use change are two global and interacting forces of change that have wide‐reaching effects on socio‐ecological systems. Despite their interconnectedness, the two are mostly considered separately in investment programs. Therefore, without an integrated systemic approach that considers these interactions, we will fail to achieve the ambitions to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals. By integrating the Driver‐Pressure‐State‐Impact‐Response framework and the System of Environmental‐Economic Accounts Ecosystem Accounting, this paper assesses how the interlinkages between climate change and land use change can be jointly considered in the design of climate adaptation and ecosystem conservation investments. The analysis points to the following priorities for interventions in an integrated approach: forest conservation, protection of peatlands, climate‐smart agriculture, and restoration of degraded lands. The paper furthermore suggests a set of systemic investment principles that can contribute to capital allocation for climate adaptation and conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Effect of Financial Statement Incomparability on Investment Decisions.
- Author
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Anderson, Spencer B.
- Subjects
FINANCIAL statements ,ACCOUNTING ,INVESTMENTS ,DECISION making ,COMPARABILITY (Accounting) ,CAPITAL allocation - Abstract
I use standard setters' description of comparability to conceptualize two forms of incomparability in financial reporting. Using a laboratory experiment, I construct states of both comparability and incomparability and investigate investors' capital allocation decisions under each. Benchmarking against states of comparable reporting, I find that incomparable reporting making different economics look alike results in lower-quality investment decisions, relative to incomparable reporting making similar economics look different. My evidence suggests the difference in investment quality is due to the reduced ability of supplemental disclosures to compensate for one type of incomparability relative to the other type. The study uses a setting holding other reporting characteristics, such as faithful representation, constant, and results are robust to alternative configurations of incomparability. Collectively, my results suggest that the type of incomparability has differential effects on the quality of investment decisions. My findings should inform standard setters aiming to help users allocate capital. JEL Classifications: G11; M41. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Monetary Stimulus amidst the Infrastructure Investment Spree: Evidence from China's Loan‐Level Data.
- Author
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CHEN, KAIJI, GAO, HAOYU, HIGGINS, PATRICK, WAGGONER, DANIEL F., and ZHA, TAO
- Subjects
ECONOMIC stimulus ,INFRASTRUCTURE financing ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- ,BANK loans ,INVESTMENTS ,CREDIT control ,FINANCING of government business enterprises ,CAPITAL allocation ,GROSS domestic product ,MONEY supply - Abstract
We study how a fiscal expansion via infrastructure investment influences the dynamic impacts of monetary stimulus on credit allocation. We develop a two‐stage approach and apply it to the Chinese economy with a confidential loan‐level data set that covers all sectors. We find that infrastructure investment significantly weakened monetary policy's transmission to credit allocated to private firms, while reinforcing the monetary effects on loans to state‐owned firms. This fiscal‐monetary interaction channel is key to understanding the preferential credit access enjoyed by state‐owned firms during the stimulus period. Consequently, monetary stimulus crowded out private investment and decreased capital allocation efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Do Managers Learn from Analysts about Investing? Evidence from Internal Capital Allocation.
- Author
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Guo, Re-Jin and Zhong, Rong
- Subjects
FINANCIAL analysts ,CHIEF executive officers ,LEARNING ,INVESTMENTS ,DECISION making ,CAPITAL allocation - Abstract
Analysts are recognized for their expertise in predicting industry growth, yet little is known about whether CEOs learn from analysts' insights to guide investment decisions. Focusing on conglomerates where CEOs are underinformed about segment growth opportunities, we find that CEOs learn industry insights from analysts to adjust internal capital allocation. The extent of learning increases when analysts have closer proximity to CEOs or expertise in segments where CEOs face larger internal knowledge gaps. CEOs likely learn from analysts through private communications, as the insights learned are not yet publicly available, difficult to replace with other sources, and persistently impactful for firms. CEOs also exploit conference calls as another way to learn from analysts. As a result, learning analysts' insights enhances firm value. We employ brokerage mergers/closures as a quasi-experiment to address endogeneity concerns. Overall, our study provides novel evidence on a learning channel through which analysts add value to firms. JEL Classifications: D80; D83; G10; G31. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The Hunt for Alpha in ESG Fixed Income: Fund Evidence from around the World.
- Author
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Zorina, Inna and Corlett-Roy, Lux
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL, social, & governance factors ,CAPITAL allocation ,INVESTMENTS ,FIXED incomes ,INVESTORS - Abstract
Investment organizations around the globe have increasingly been committed to integrating ESG considerations into their processes. Capital allocation to ESG fixed-income funds keeps growing both in absolute terms and relative to non-ESG fixed-income funds. The answer to the question whether incorporating ESG information into analysis and applying ESG screens leads to similar, better, or worse investment performance is of interest to many investors. To help shed light on this question, we test whether ESG fixed-income funds generate out- or underperformance after controlling for systematic fixed-income factors. We apply a consistent methodology across a broad sample of ESG fixed-income funds that includes European, US, and Global funds. Most funds in our sample did not produce statistically significant positive or negative gross alphas. Performance of ESG fixed-income funds appears to be mainly driven by systematic fixed-income factor exposures. This conclusion is similar across ESG fixed-income funds with a European, US, and Global investment focus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. THIS IS NOT AN ESG ARTICLE: The case for taking a scientific approach to an often misunderstood framework.
- Author
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Minguela, Rebeca
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL, social, & governance factors ,SUSTAINABILITY ,CAPITAL allocation ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INVESTMENTS - Published
- 2022
10. European self-storage steps into the limelight.
- Author
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Mahboob, Zubaer
- Subjects
INSTITUTIONAL investors ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CAPITAL allocation ,INVESTMENTS ,PRICE inflation - Published
- 2023
11. Shareholder shake-up.
- Subjects
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STOCKHOLDERS , *INVESTORS , *ACTIVISM , *CAPITAL allocation , *INVESTMENTS , *ASIANS - Abstract
The article focuses on the rise of activist investing in Asia, where shareholder-friendly rulemaking and a new class of Asian activist investors are emerging, targeting companies with low valuations and concentrated ownership structures. Topics include the growing number of companies subjected to activist demands; the factors driving activism in the region; and the challenges posed by the influence of founding families, government interests and state-aligned investors.
- Published
- 2023
12. Capital allocation and ownership concentration in the shipping industry.
- Author
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Drobetz, Wolfgang, Janzen, Malte, and Requejo, Ignacio
- Subjects
- *
MARITIME shipping , *INVESTMENTS , *FREIGHT & freightage rates , *CARGO ships , *BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
Highlights • We measure the sensitivity of investment to changes in investment opportunities in the shipping industry. • Investment in commercial shipping follows freight rates. • Ownership concentration reinforces the positive effect of freight rates on investment. • The positive impact of ownership translates into higher firm value. • Results are driven by the group of firms where the largest owner is a financial investor. Abstract We measure the sensitivity of investment to changes in investment opportunities in the shipping industry, and test whether this relation is moderated by ownership concentration. For a sample of 126 globally listed shipping firms, we find that investment in commercial shipping follows freight rates, a measure of the potential income stream from owning a vessel. Ownership concentration, measured as the ownership stake of the largest shareholder, reinforces the positive effect of freight rates on investment, indicating a higher relative efficiency of capital allocation. The positive impact ownership has on the investment-freight rate sensitivity also translates into higher firm value. An analysis of investor identity shows that our results are driven by the group of firms where the largest owner is a financial investor, who is usually more focused on shareholder value maximization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Capital Allocation in Decentralized Businesses.
- Author
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Turnbull, Stuart M.
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL centralization ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,BUSINESS enterprises ,INVESTMENTS ,DECISION making - Abstract
This paper described a theory of capital allocation for decentralized businesses, taking into account the costs associated with risk capital. We derive an adjusted present value expression for making investment decisions, that incorporates the time varying profile of risk capital. We discuss the implications for business performance measurement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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14. A Model of Capital Allocation, Education, and Job Choice in China.
- Author
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Lien, Jaimie W., Wang, Wei, and Zheng, Jie
- Subjects
CAPITAL allocation ,EDUCATION ,SKILLED labor ,INVESTMENTS ,CAPITAL market ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
The narrowing wage gap between high- and low-skilled workers in the Chinese labor market in recent years is suggestive of government interventions which may have been implemented in the capital markets. We develop a game theoretic model between a continuum of heterogeneous workers and the government, where workers choose education levels, the government chooses its capital allocation strategy subject to a budget constraint, and the workers then make employment choices. The government is modeled as having a possible policy priority on particular industries or sectors. We characterize the existence and uniqueness conditions for equilibrium of the game and provide a closed form solution to the model for reasonable parameter values. We show that the wage ratio between high- and low-skilled workers decreases as government’s policy priority (or bias) toward low-skilled sectors increases, up to a threshold level of the policy bias. Beyond that threshold level, the wage gap between high- and low-skill workers is negative. Thus the shrinking wage gap can be explained by the government’s capital investment strategy which is driven by its policy priority bias. We derive comparative statics results and discuss policy implications. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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15. Findings from the 2015 Institutional Real Estate Capital Allocations Monitor.
- Author
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Green, Matthew
- Subjects
REAL property ,BUSINESS forecasting ,INVESTMENTS ,ECONOMIC trends ,RESOURCE allocation ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Since 2013, the Baker Program in Real Estate and Hodes Weill & Associates have co-sponsored the Institutional Real Estate Capital Allocations Monitor (the "Allocations Monitor"). The Allocations Monitor was created to conduct a comprehensive annual assessment of institutional allocations to real estate investments through analyzing trends and collecting survey responses of institutional portfolios and allocations by region, type, and size of institution. The Allocations Monitor reports on the role of real estate investments in institutional portfolios, and the impact of institutional allocation trends on the investment management industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
16. CULTURE UNPACKED: Who gains when cultural organisations claim 'neutrality'?
- Author
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Silina, Maria
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL, social, & governance factors ,SUSTAINABILITY ,CAPITAL allocation ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INVESTMENTS - Published
- 2022
17. Why India: investing in the Indian subcontinent.
- Author
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Reddy, Sashi
- Subjects
INVESTMENTS ,LOANS ,FINANCIAL liberalization ,CAPITAL allocation ,CAPITAL investments - Published
- 2023
18. The Study of the Development of Chinese Stock Market Based on Factor Analysis.
- Author
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Yu, Lu, Hu, Xiao-wan, and Guo, Kun
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,FACTOR analysis ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,INVESTMENTS ,PROBLEM solving - Abstract
The article chooses nine indicators from scale, liquidity, financing function, investment function and effectiveness of stock market, using factor analysis to simplified them to three comprehensive indicators: capital allocation, investment and financing level and operation, then focuses on the different weight of each index based on its influence degree to build the index which can fully reflect the development of Chinese stock market. The results show that although the overall development of Chinese stock market in 2003-2012 was on the rise, there are still many problems, such as inefficient operation, the prevailing wind of speculation and the irrational investment behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Skewed distributions in finance and actuarial science: a review.
- Author
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Adcock, Christopher, Eling, Martin, and Loperfido, Nicola
- Subjects
SKEWNESS (Probability theory) ,ACTUARIAL science ,INSURANCE claims ,EMPIRICAL research ,EXPONENTIAL functions ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
That the returns on financial assets and insurance claims are not well described by the multivariate normal distribution is generally acknowledged in the literature. This paper presents a review of the use of the skew-normal distribution and its extensions in finance and actuarial science, highlighting known results as well as potential directions for future research. When skewness and kurtosis are present in asset returns, the skew-normal and skew-Student distributions are natural candidates in both theoretical and empirical work. Their parameterization is parsimonious and they are mathematically tractable. In finance, the distributions are interpretable in terms of the efficient markets hypothesis. Furthermore, they lead to theoretical results that are useful for portfolio selection and asset pricing. In actuarial science, the presence of skewness and kurtosis in insurance claims data is the main motivation for using the skew-normal distribution and its extensions. The skew-normal has been used in studies on risk measurement and capital allocation, which are two important research fields in actuarial science. Empirical studies consider the skew-normal distribution because of its flexibility, interpretability, and tractability. This paper comprises four main sections: an overview of skew-normal distributions; a review of skewness in finance, including asset pricing, portfolio selection, time series modeling, and a review of its applications in insurance, in which the use of alternative distribution functions is widespread. The final section summarizes some of the challenges associated with the use of skew-elliptical distributions and points out some directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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20. FINANCING CONSTRAINTS: THE INFLUENCE OF POLITICAL AND LEGAL INSTITUTIONS.
- Author
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Marhfor, Ahmed, M'Zali, Bouchra, and Cosset, Jean-Claude
- Subjects
CORPORATE finance ,JUSTICE administration ,INVESTMENTS ,CASH flow ,CASH management - Abstract
In this paper, we assess which approach -legal or political- better explains differences in firms' financing constraints. While many scholars recognize the importance of country institutions in shaping efficient capital markets, there is considerable disagreement on which institutional factors are most important. We find evidence that both political and legal factors are relevant in explaining financing constraints. We also provide evidence on channels through which specific institutions may affect capital allocation. Our results indicate that common law origin and strong public enforcement improve access to finance. Furthermore, we show that high levels of press freedom, less restrictions on investment and low levels of corruption help alleviate firm's financing constraints. Our findings are robust to many aspects of our methodology and to self-selection bias related to the choice of covering a firm (analyst coverage) and cross-listing on US markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
21. Rebalancing the economy and returning to growth through job creation and better capital allocation.
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,CAPITAL allocation ,INVESTMENTS ,LABOR market ,JOB creation ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The article discusses policies to rebalance the economy of Portugal by measures such as restoring the banking system, promoting efficient investment allocation, and fostering improved labor market performance in order to create more and better jobs. It mentions Portugal's implementation of a European Union-International Monetary Fund financial assistance program since May 2011. The necessity of bank deleveraging to ensure adequate credit supply is also addressed.
- Published
- 2012
22. JUSTIFICATION OF PER-UNIT RISK CAPITAL ALLOCATION IN PORTFOLIO CREDIT RISK MODELS.
- Author
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DORFLEITNER, GREGOR and PFISTER, TAMARA
- Subjects
VENTURE capital ,INVESTMENTS ,CREDIT ,NUMERICAL analysis ,PROBABILITY theory ,PRICING - Abstract
Risk capital allocation is based on the assumption that the risk of a homogeneous portfolio is scaled up and down with the portfolio size. In this article we show that this assumption is true for large portfolios, but has to be revised for small ones. On basis of numerical examples we calculate the minimum portfolio size that is necessary to limit the error of gradient risk capital allocation and the resulting error in a portfolio optimization algorithm or pricing strategy. We show the dependency of this minimum portfolio size on different parameters like the probability of default and on the credit risk model that is used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Risk-Adjusted Measures of Value Creation in Financial Institutions.
- Author
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Milne, Alistair and Onorato, Mario
- Subjects
FINANCIAL institutions ,INVESTMENTS ,VENTURE capital ,ASSETS (Accounting) ,DEBT ,RISK management in business - Abstract
Many financial institutions assess portfolio decisions using RAROC, the ratio of expected return to risk (or 'economic') capital. We use asset pricing theory to determine the appropriate hurdle rate, finding that this varies with the skewness of asset returns. We quantify this discrepancy under a range of assumptions showing that the RAROC hurdle rate differs substantially, being higher by a factor of five or more for equity which has a right skew compared to debt which has a pronounced left skew, and also between different qualities of debt exposure. We discuss implications for both financial institution risk management and supervision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A romániai biztosítási piac fejlettségének komparatív elemzése a többi újonnan csatlakozott EU-tagországgal szemben.
- Author
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Kovács, Ildikó
- Subjects
INSURANCE exchanges ,INVESTMENTS ,INSURANCE companies ,RETURN on assets ,ASSET management - Abstract
Copyright of Economists' Forum / Közgazdász Fórum is the property of Hungarian Economists' Society of Romania and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
25. VaR and ES for linear portfolios with mixture of generalized Laplace distributions risk factors.
- Author
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Sadefo Kamdem, Jules
- Subjects
VALUE at risk ,LAPLACE transformation ,INVESTMENTS ,RISK management in business ,GARCH model ,AGRICULTURE ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
In this paper, we propose an explicit estimation of Value-at-Risk (VaR) and Expected Shortfall (ES) for linear portfolios when the risk factors change with a convex mixture of generalized Laplace distributions (M-GLD). We introduce the dynamics Delta-GLD-VaR, Delta-GLD-ES, Delta-MGLD-VaR and Delta-MGLD-ES, by using conditional correlation multivariate GARCH. The generalized Laplace distribution impose less restrictive assumptions during estimation that should improve the precision of the VaR and ES through the varying shape and fat tails of the risk factors in relation with the historical sample data. We also suggested some areas of application to measure price risk in agriculture, risk management and financial portfolio optimization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Capital Allocation and Timely Accounting Recognition of Economic Losses.
- Author
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Bushman, Robert M., Piotroski, Joseph D., and Smith, Abbie J.
- Subjects
RESOURCE allocation ,CAPITAL allocation ,ACCOUNTING ,INVESTMENTS ,INVESTMENT analysis ,BUSINESS losses ,CORPORATE governance - Abstract
This paper explores direct relations between corporate investment behavior and the timeliness of accounting recognition of economic losses (TLR) reflected in a country's accounting regime. We explicitly investigate the extent to which TLR influences investment decisions of firm managers. Given the asymmetric emphasis on negative outcomes inherent in TLR, we hypothesize that TLR will most strongly influence investment behavior when managers face deteriorating investment environments. We conjecture that TLR will have an asymmetric impact on investment behavior whereby TLR impacts firms' investment decisions in the face of declining investment opportunities, but not in the face of increasing in investment opportunities. Using firm-level investment decisions spanning twenty five countries, we find that investment responses to declining opportunities increases with TLR, while we find no evidence that TLR influences the sensitivity of investment to increasing investment opportunities. Our results are robust to alternative estimates of TLR, alternative estimates of investment responses to changing investment opportunities, and to controls for important country-level, industry-level, and firm-level variables that may impact firms' investment decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. DIVERSIFICARE PONDERATĂ ÎN OPERAŢIUNI FINANCIARE.
- Author
-
PURCARU, Ion and VERBONCU, Ion
- Subjects
CAPITAL ,RESOURCE allocation ,PORTFOLIO diversification ,FINANCE ,FINANCIAL risk management ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
Using the weighted diversity measures and the principle of maximum diversity, some considerations on the capital allocation problems are presented and developed in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
28. An axiomatic characterization of capital allocations of coherent risk measures.
- Author
-
Kalkbrener, Michael
- Subjects
- *
ASSET allocation , *INVESTMENTS , *INVESTORS , *PORTFOLIO management (Investments) , *VENTURE capital - Abstract
An axiomatic definition of coherent capital allocations is given. It is shown that coherent capital allocations defined by the proposed axiom system are closely linked to coherent risk measures. More precisely, the associated risk measure of a coherent capital allocation is coherent and, conversely, for every coherent risk measure there exists a coherent capital allocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. AN AXIOMATIC APPROACH TO CAPITAL ALLOCATION.
- Author
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Kalkbrener, Michael
- Subjects
CAPITAL ,PORTFOLIO management (Investments) ,RESOURCE allocation ,INVESTMENT analysis ,INVESTMENTS ,SECURITIES - Abstract
Capital allocation techniques are of central importance in portfolio management and risk-based performance measurement. In this paper we propose an axiom system for capital allocation and analyze its satisfiability and completeness: it is shown that for a given risk measure ρ there exists a capital allocation that satisfies the main axioms if and only if ρ is subadditive and positively homogeneous. Furthermore, it is proved that the axiom system uniquely specifies . We apply the axiomatization to the most popular risk measures in the finance industry in order to derive explicit capital allocation formulae for these measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Credit risk enhancement in a network of interdependent firms
- Author
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Neu, Peter and Kühn, Reimer
- Subjects
- *
CREDIT , *CREDIT risk , *INVESTMENTS , *CONTAGION (Social psychology) - Abstract
We generalize existing structural models for credit risk to capture the impact of counterparty defaults on economic capital allocated to banks’ loan portfolios. Exploring the analogy to a lattice gas model from physics, correlations between sequential defaults are modeled as due to functionally defined, heterogeneous couplings between mutually dependent counterparties. We show that—already for moderate micro-economic dependencies—counterparty risk results in a fattening of the tails in the portfolio loss distribution. In particular, for stronger mutually supportive relationship between the firms, collective phenomena such as bursts and avalanches of defaults can be observed in the model. In this context, traditional credit risk models are inadequate because they underestimate the required capital buffer. Our model setting is particularly applicable for doing stress analyses of credit risk in loan portfolios. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A risk-adjusted approach to comparing the return on investment in health care programs.
- Author
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Sendi, Pedram, Al, Maiwenn J., and Zimmermann, Heinz
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COST effectiveness ,INVESTMENTS ,RISK management in business ,RESOURCE allocation ,HEALTH planning ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,RISK assessment ,EVALUATION research ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,STATISTICAL models ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The league table approach to rank ordering health care programs according to the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio is a common method to guide policy makers in setting priorities for resource allocation. In the presence of uncertainty, however, ranking programs is complicated by the degree of variability associated with each program. Confidence intervals for cost-effectiveness ratios may be overlapping. Moreover, confidence intervals may include negative ratios and the interpretation of negative cost-effectiveness ratios is ambiguous. We suggest to rank mutually exclusive health care programs according to their rate of return which is defined as the net monetary benefit over the costs of the program. However, how does a program with a higher expected return but higher uncertainty compare to a program with a lower expected return but lower risk? In the present paper we propose a risk-adjusted measure to compare the return on investment in health care programs. Financing a health care program is treated as an investment in a risky asset. The risky asset is combined with a risk-free asset in order to construct a combined portfolio. The weights attributed to the risk-free and risky assets are chosen in such a manner that all programs under consideration exhibit the same degree of uncertainty. We can then compare the performance of the individual programs by constructing a risk-adjusted league table of expected returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Capital Allocation Under a Financial Constraint: The Classical Investment Function.
- Author
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Duménil, Gérard and Lévy, Dominique
- Subjects
CAPITAL allocation ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
In the modern literature on investment, a distinction is normally made between neo-Classical and Keynesian theories of investment. An earlier original approach can, however, be located in the works of Smith, Ricardo, and Marx. In this Classical tradition, investment is subject to a capital constraint, and capitalists allocate their capital according to the relative profitability of the various industries. We show that this behaviour is rational in a model in which capitalists optimize over an infinite horizon and form rational expectations: inter-industry mobility can be expressed as an adjustment behaviour such that investments, ΔK[sup i] are proportional to profitability differentials: ΔK[sup i] = A[sup i] (r[sup i] - r) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Indonesia Economic Quarterly, December 2015 : Reforming Amid Uncertainty
- Author
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World Bank
- Subjects
INVESTMENT ,TOTAL DEBT ,FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENTS ,PRIVATE INVESTMENT ,DEPOSIT ,BOND YIELDS ,INFLATION ,EMERGING MARKET ,FISCAL DEFICIT ,EXPROPRIATION ,EQUITIES ,RURAL CREDIT ,TRADE SECTORS ,INVESTMENTS ,EXPORT GROWTH ,PLEDGE ,PORTFOLIO INFLOWS ,STOCK ,FORWARD MARKET ,TRANCHES ,CONSUMER PRICE INDEX ,POVERTY ,INVESTORS ,COLLATERAL ,CREDIT GROWTH ,LAND TITLES ,BONDS ,SHARES ,FINANCIAL MARKET ,TRANSACTIONS ,NON-PERFORMING LOANS ,PUBLIC SPENDING ,BROKER ,GOVERNMENT BUDGET ,TRANSPARENCY ,REAL EXCHANGE RATE ,EMERGING MARKETS ,FINANCIAL MARKETS ,SPOT MARKET ,EMERGING ECONOMIES ,BALANCE OF PAYMENTS ,HOLDING ,DEPOSITS ,MARKETS ,ISSUANCES ,INFORMATION SYSTEMS ,BORROWING COSTS ,PROFIT ,INTERNATIONAL FINANCE ,VARIABLE COSTS ,HOLDING REQUIREMENT ,GLOBAL ECONOMY ,PROPERTY RIGHTS ,BASIS POINTS ,BALANCE SHEET ,AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES ,SWAP ,MONETARY POLICY ,DISBURSEMENT ,INCOME TAXES ,RURAL BANK ,INTEREST RATES ,MARKET ,INTEREST PAYMENTS ,WORKING CAPITAL ,DOMESTIC CREDIT ,SECURITIES ISSUANCES ,CAPITAL ALLOCATION ,PROPERTY ,FINANCIAL RISK ,BUDGET DEFICIT ,FIXED CAPITAL ,PORTFOLIO INVESTMENT ,DISBURSEMENTS ,CURRENCIES ,PORTFOLIO FLOWS ,TRADE BALANCE ,PORTFOLIO ,TRADING SYSTEM ,POLITICAL ECONOMY ,BUDGETS ,HUMAN DEVELOPMENT ,INCOME TAX ,RETURN ON ASSETS ,SECURITY ,MARKET PARTICIPANTS ,DERIVATIVES ,ACCESS TO INFORMATION ,LOCAL GOVERNMENT ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,REGULATORY FRAMEWORK ,FISCAL POLICY ,LIABILITY ,EXCHANGE RATE ,INVESTMENT DECISIONS ,BOND SALE ,EQUIPMENT ,REVENUE ,CURRENCY ,CAPITAL GRANTS ,LANDHOLDERS ,ECONOMIC POLICIES ,BOND ,GOVERNMENT SECURITIES ,INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ,FOREIGN INVESTMENTS ,DIRECT INVESTMENT ,EQUITY MARKET ,EXTERNAL BORROWING ,FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS ,OPTION ,LOAN ,COMMODITY PRICES ,BOND ISSUANCE ,INVESTMENT LOAN ,SECURITIES ,MATURITY ,MARKET INTEREST RATE ,FUTURE ,GOVERNMENT REGULATION ,GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT ,EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES ,ISSUANCE ,FOREIGN INVESTMENT ,CONTRACTS ,INVESTOR ,TRADING ,BUDGETING ,CAPITAL FORMATION ,BOND SPREAD ,REVENUES ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,CASH TRANSFER ,DEFICIT ,INVESTMENT SPENDING ,LOCAL CURRENCY ,INTERNATIONAL INVESTOR ,LAND AS COLLATERAL ,MARKET ACCESS ,INVESTMENT LOANS ,PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS ,CAPITAL FLOWS ,FOREIGN INFLOWS ,TAX ,FOREIGN INVESTORS ,INVENTORY ,STOCK MARKET ,TREATIES ,BUDGET ,GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT ,ENTERPRISE CREDIT ,GOVERNMENT DEBT ,STOCKS ,MARKET ECONOMIES ,RISK AVERSION ,LENDING ,BENEFICIARIES ,MARKET REQUIREMENTS ,INVESTMENT FLOWS ,INFLATION RATE ,REGISTRATION SYSTEM ,SOVEREIGN BONDS ,GOVERNMENT BONDS ,PLEDGES ,GUARANTEE ,EMERGING MARKET BOND ,RESERVES ,GOODS ,ENFORCEMENT MECHANISMS ,LOANS ,TREATY ,SETTLEMENT ,SECURITIES ISSUANCE ,RISK MANAGEMENT ,LONG-TERM COST ,GOVERNMENT BOND YIELD ,TARIFF ,INVENTORIES ,ASSET PRICES ,TRANCHE ,FINANCE ,EXPORTERS ,MARKET EQUITIES ,EXTERNAL FUNDING ,EXTERNAL DEBT ,INTERNATIONAL BOND ,LEVIES ,LABOR MARKET ,SHORT-TERM CAPITAL ,EMERGING MARKET EQUITIES ,DEBT ,MACROECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT ,BANKING SECTOR ,BOND YIELD ,CAPITAL ADEQUACY ,COMMODITY PRICE ,LONG-TERM COSTS ,FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT ,RETURN ,CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE ,LAND TITLE ,LAND VALUE ,CAPITAL OUTFLOWS ,DOMESTIC DEBT ,GOVERNMENT SUPPORT ,TAX INCENTIVES ,BOND INDEX ,FOREIGN EXCHANGE ,LEGAL PROTECTION ,EXCHANGE ,ACCOUNTING ,GLOBAL TRADE ,FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS ,TARIFFS ,LOCAL GOVERNMENTS ,OIL PRICES ,INSURANCE ,CLAIMANT ,TAXES ,EQUITY ,GOVERNMENT BOND ,BANK LOANS ,BASIS POINT ,DOUBLE TAXATION ,INTEREST RATE SPREADS ,PROFITS ,EXPENDITURES ,GLOBAL BONDS ,INTERNATIONAL BANK ,INVESTMENT ACTIVITY ,CONTRACT ,EQUITY INDICES ,OIL PRICE ,INTEREST ,MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS ,FIXED INVESTMENT ,FINANCIAL SUPPORT ,DEBT BURDEN ,CONVERSION ,CAPITAL INFLOWS ,CONSUMER GOODS ,SHARE ,CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT ,INTEREST RATE ,FOREIGN CURRENCY ,EXPENDITURE - Abstract
The Indonesia Economic Quarterly (IEQ) has two main aims. First, it reports on the key developments over the past three months in Indonesia’s economy, and places these in a longerterm and global context. Based on these developments, and on policy changes over the period, the IEQ regularly updates the outlook for Indonesia’s economy and social welfare. Second, the IEQ provides a more in-depth examination of selected economic and policy issues, and analysis of Indonesia’s medium-term development challenges. It is intended for a wide audience, including policymakers, business leaders, financial market participants, and the community of analysts and professionals engaged in Indonesia’s evolving economy. This paper discusses about the economic conditions of Indonesia for the year 2015. Emerging market assets rebounded in October 2015 after the sharp losses recorded in August and September, when the uncertainty about the Chinese economic slowdown and the U.S. interest rate outlook was particularly high. Despite a more favorable market sentiment, capital flows to emerging economies have remained weak and borrowing costs relatively high. In addition to tight financing conditions, Indonesia faced subdued external demand for its exports in the near term and persistently low commodity prices over the medium run. In 2015, fire in Indonesia cost nearly twice that of reconstruction following the 2004 tsunami in Aceh. Agriculture and forestry have sustained losses and damages in trillions. Sustained exposure to haze could also lead to the volcano effect, i.e., a decrease in plant productivity in the short term due to limited sun exposure and a deleterious effect on plant physiology and photosynthesis. The recurring nature of Indonesia’s fire crisis is of particular concern. Another potential step in Indonesia’s new reform process was the country’s signaling its intention to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement in the near future. Whether membership materializes or not, the agreement is likely to have a limited impact on trade, because import tariffs in member countries are already low and Indonesia has trade agreements with most of them.
- Published
- 2015
34. Capital Market Financing, Firm Growth, and Firm Size Distribution
- Author
-
Didier, Tatiana, Levine, Ross, and Schmukler, Sergio L.
- Subjects
BANK POLICY ,CAPITAL MARKET ACTIVITY ,FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT ,L25 ,EMERGING MARKET EQUITY ,INVESTMENT ,VALUATION ,MATURITY STRUCTURE ,STOCK MARKET ,DEBT-EQUITY ,GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT ,AMOUNT OF CAPITAL ,CAPITAL STRUCTURE ,INFORMATIONAL ASYMMETRIES ,DEPOSIT ,EQUITY FINANCING ,DISCOUNT ,PUBLIC DEBT MARKET ,EMERGING MARKET ,MATURITIES ,G10 ,DEBT CAPACITY ,CAPITAL MARKET DEVELOPMENT ,BOND ISSUER ,EQUITIES ,LENDING ,INVESTMENTS ,DOMESTIC CAPITAL ,BROKERS ,STOCK ,RETURNS ,CAPITAL MARKET FINANCING ,DEBT MARKET ,BALANCE SHEETS ,CONSUMER PRICE INDEX ,INVESTORS ,BONDS ,FINANCIAL MARKET ,MARKET LIQUIDITY ,PRIVATE BOND ,FINANCIAL SYSTEMS ,LIQUID MARKETS ,ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ,MARKET CAPITALIZATION ,COMMERCIAL PAPER ,EXCHANGES ,FINANCIAL MARKETS ,CORPORATE INVESTMENT ,EMERGING ECONOMIES ,DEPOSIT MONEY BANKS ,BOND ISSUING ,firm dynamics ,ISSUANCES ,INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS ,MARKETS ,DOMESTIC CAPITAL MARKET ,FINANCE ,STOCK MARKET DEVELOPMENT ,INTERNATIONAL MARKETS ,CORPORATE GOVERNANCE ,DOMESTIC EQUITY ,G31 ,STOCK EXCHANGES ,G32 ,firm financing ,DOMESTIC MARKETS ,CORPORATE BOND MARKETS ,LIABILITIES ,BALANCE SHEET ,ISSUERS OF SECURITIES ,FOREIGN EQUITY ,LIQUIDITY ,DUMMY VARIABLE ,BOND MARKET CAPITALIZATION ,PUBLIC DEBT ,DEBT ,EQUITY MARKET CAPITALIZATION ,BOND ISSUANCES ,ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION ,MARKET ,BOND MARKETS ,CAPITAL ALLOCATION ,IPO ,EQUITY ISSUANCES ,CASH FLOW ,OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE ,FIRM PERFORMANCE ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,RETURN ,LONG-TERM DEBT ,access to finance ,BOND FINANCING ,CAPITAL MARKET ,CAPITAL RAISING ,PUBLIC OFFERINGS ,OFFSHORE FINANCIAL CENTERS ,DEBT ISSUANCES ,CORPORATE BOND MARKET ,POLITICAL ECONOMY ,EXCHANGE ,ACCOUNTING ,INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ,RETURN ON ASSETS ,SECURITY ,FOREIGN MARKETS ,MARKET SIZE ,VALUATIONS ,FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION ,MARKET DEVELOPMENT ,CAPITAL MARKETS ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,SECURITIES MARKETS ,INFORMATION ASYMMETRY ,FINANCIAL SYSTEM ,LIABILITY ,FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ,INVESTMENT DECISIONS ,FOREIGN CAPITAL ,BOND MARKET ,INSURANCE ,EQUITY ISSUES ,CORPORATE BONDS ,TAXES ,EQUITY ,INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INTEGRATION ,BOND ,DOMESTIC BOND ,PRIVATE CREDIT ,PRIMARY MARKETS ,DEBT SECURITIES ,DUMMY VARIABLES ,EQUITY MARKET ,PROFITS ,FINANCIAL STUDIES ,BOND ISSUERS ,BOND ISSUANCE ,PUBLIC FINANCE ,DOMESTIC BOND MARKETS ,BANK CREDIT ,FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT ,MATURITY ,SECURITIES ,INTERNATIONAL BANK ,FUTURE ,STOCK RETURNS ,ddc:330 ,STOCK MARKETS ,INVESTMENT BANKS ,EQUITY MARKETS ,LABOR MARKETS ,ISSUANCE ,CORPORATE BOND ,CONTRACTS ,CAPITALIZATION ,INTEREST ,capital raisings ,HOME MARKET ,CASH FLOWS ,FINANCIAL STRUCTURES ,FINANCIAL STRUCTURE ,F65 ,EQUITY ISSUANCE ,G00 ,INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL ,TRANSACTION ,RISK EXPOSURE ,MARKET EQUITY - Abstract
How many and which firms issue equity and bonds in domestic and international markets, how do these firms grow relative to non-issuing firms, and how does firm performance vary along the firm size distribution? To evaluate these questions, a new data set is constructed by matching data on firm-level capital raising activity with balance sheet data for 45,527 listed firms in 51 countries. Three main patterns emerge from the analysis. (1) Only a few large firms issue equity or bonds, and among them a small subset has raised a large proportion of the funds raised during the 1990s and 2000s. (2) Issuers grow faster than non-issuers in assets, sales, and employment, that is, firms do not simply use securities markets to adjust their financial accounts. (3) The firm size distribution of issuers evolves differently from that of non-issuers, tightening among issuers and widening among non-issuers.
- Published
- 2015
35. What Governments May Do: Policy Options
- Author
-
Mintz, Jack M., author and Weichenrieder, Alfons J., author
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. How Can Emerging Market Economies Benefit from a Corporate Bond Market?
- Author
-
Bolton, Patrick, author and Freixas, Xavier, author
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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