Annual Conference

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Corporate Finance

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May 2015

What are the social consequences of liquidity shocks? We answer this question relying on a natural experiment from 1930s China, where the money supply contracted as a consequence of the 1933 US Silver Purchase program. Using a novel, hand-collected data set of loan contracts to individual Chinese fi...
Keywords: Silver Purchase program, bank liquidity, social unrest
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Annual Conference

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Investment Finance

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May 2015

Using a Google search-based measure of investor attention, this paper investigates investor attention patterns and its determinants. We document that investor attention displays strong seasonality. It is significantly lower on Fridays and in summer months. We find that investor attention increases s...
Keywords: limited attention, information processing, attention allocation, information efficiency
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Annual Conference

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Investment Finance

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May 2015

We propose a new, price-based measure of information risk called abnormal idiosyncratic volatility (AIV) that captures information asymmetry faced by uninformed investors. AIV is the idiosyncratic volatility prior to information events in excess of normal levels. Using earnings announcements as info...
Keywords: Information Risk, Idiosyncratic Volatility, Earnings Announcement, Expected Returns
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Annual Conference

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Investment Finance

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May 2015

Motivated by an intriguing observation during the recent U.S. housing cycle that counties with housing supply elasticities in an intermediate range experienced the most dramatic price booms and busts, this paper develops a model to analyze information aggregation and learning in housing markets. In ...
Keywords: Elasticity, price boom, housing market;housing cycle
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Annual Conference

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Corporate Finance

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May 2015

Career concerns may lead CEOs to distort reported performance (Fudenberg and Tirole (1995)), particularly in the early years of tenure when there is greater uncertainty about the CEO’s ability. We investigate whether the presence of reporting distortions affects CEOs’ compensation over their ten...
Keywords: executive compensation, Tenure, Earnings Management, Career Concerns
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