Earnings Management and Stock Exposure to Exchange Rate Risk

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Earnings Management and Stock Exposure to Exchange Rate Risk"

Transcription

1 Earnngs Management and Stock Exposure to Exchange Rate Rsk Feng-Y Chang a, Chn-Wen Hsn b, and Shn-Rong Shah-Hou c JEL classfcaton: F31, G30 Keywords: Exchange rate exposure, Earnngs Management, Theory of optmal hedgng a Graduate School of Management, Yuan Ze Unversty b Department of Fnance, Yuan Ze Unversty, Taoyuan 32003, Tawan, Tel: ext. 2662, Fax: , e-mal: fncwshn@saturn.yzu.edu.tw (correspondng author) c. Department of Fnance, Yuan Ze Unversty, Tawan.

2 Abstract Ths study proposes an earnngs management hypothess to explan the lack of prevalng evdence of sgnfcant relatonshp between exchange rate rsk and stock returns of U.S. corporatons. In partcular, we examne whether the earnngs management actvtes undertaken by managers mtgate frm exchange rate exposure. Consstent wth our hypothess, we fnd that frms engaged wth greater earnngs management actvtes, especally those of ncome smoothng, tend to exhbt sgnfcantly lower exchange rate exposure. Ths assocaton tends to be partcularly strong when the currency movements are adverse to the frm earnngs. Our results also have mplcatons for the nformaton contents about earnngs qualty shed from the correlaton between accrual changes and cash flow changes. 1

3 1. Introducton Foregn currency exchange rate rsk affects a frm s operatng and fnancng actvtes and therefore the assocated cash flows. Most pror studes, however, faled to fnd a sgnfcant relaton between foregn exchange rate fluctuatons and stock returns of U.S. corporatons [e.g., Joron (1990), Amhud (1994) and Bodnar and Gentry (1993), Bartov and Bodnar (1994), Grffn and Stulz (2001) and Dodge et al. (2002)]. 1 Varous explanatons have been suggested to resolve ths paradox, ncludng the use of hedgng nstruments [Rawls and Smthson (1989), Dolde (1993), Geczy et al. (1997), He and Ng (1998), and Allayanns and Ofek (2001)], the delayed reacton of the stock prce to the exchange rate fluctuatons [Bartov and Bodnar (1994), Chow et al. (1997a,b), Grffn and Stulz (2001), and Bodnar and Wong (2003)] and possble sample selecton problems [Bartov and Bodnar (1994)]. Nonetheless, only lmted success has been reached. Ths paper attempts to offer another explanaton to ths puzzle, thanks to the recent advances n the earnngs management lterature. In partcular, we argue that earnngs management by corporate managers contrbutes to the nsgnfcant assocaton between exchange rate changes and stock returns. Exchange rate changes affect a frm s fnancal poston. Gans or losses due to favorable or adverse exchange rate movements appear n a frm s fnancal report and lead to earnngs performance devatng from corporate target. Although the mpact of unexpected exchange rate changes can be mtgated through the usage of foregn currency dervatves, however, certan frms also argue n ther accountng report that they cannot and do not want to fully elmnate ther exchange rate rsk. For ths reason, a frm has ncentves to reduce the mpact of unexpected exchange rate fluctuatons through earnngs management strateges when ts currency rsk exposure s not hedged or not well-managed. If a frm does employ earnngs management to wndow dress reported operatng results, nvestors wll not be able to tmely and 1 One excepton s the evdence presented by Wllamson (2001), whch fnds sgnfcant compettve effects of exchange rate shocks between Japanese and the U.S. automotve ndustres. In terms of nternatonal evdence, Bodnar and Gentry (1993) and He and Ng (1998) fnd more sgnfcant exchange rate exposure for Canadan and Japanese frms. Dodge et al. (2002) fnd that exchange rate movements are economcally sgnfcant n terms of frm value for nternatonal markets. Grffn and Stulz (2001) fnd that the common ndustry effect across countres s several tmes larger than the competton effect of exchange rate shocks on U.S. ndustres. The exchange rate effects for other countres are larger, but are stll generally small. 2

4 accurately evaluate ts exchange rate exposure because the actual mpact of exchange rate changes on frm value wll not even be released n the future. Ths then leads to the absence of a sgnfcant relaton between exchange rate fluctuatons and stock returns. In vew of ths possblty, we hypothesze that those frms employng greater levels of earnngs management wll reduce more of ther exchange rate exposure that s assessed by the stock market. Further analyses wll be developed later n ths paper to present such possblty. Dumas (1978), Hodder (1982), and Adler and Dumas (1984) defne a frm s exchange rate exposure as the senstvty of a frm s market value to unexpected exchange rate varatons. Followng Adler and Dumas (1984), we measure a frm s exchange-rate exposure as the regresson coeffcent of the frm s stock returns on the foregn exchange rate(s) changes whle controllng for the Fama-French three factors (1993). The lagged as well as the contemporaneous exchange rate change s ncluded n the regresson model to ncorporate the possble delay n the market s reacton to exchange rate fluctuatons. Usng a sample of non-fnancal COMPUSTAT frms, we fnd that only about 22 percent of our sample frms have sgnfcant contemporaneous exposure coeffcents and about 18 percent of the sample frms have sgnfcant lagged exposure coeffcents. Ths prelmnary result s consstent wth exstng studes and also conforms to our earnngs management hypothess, whch mples that the mpact of exchange rate changes wll not be fully reflected from ether current or future stock prces f contnued earnngs management s at work. The combnaton of contemporaneous and lagged exposure coeffcents s then used to measure a frm s combned exchange rate exposure as suggested by Bartov and Bodnar (1994). Followng the study of Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003), we apply four earnngs management measures to capture the extent to whch a frm manpulates reported earnngs. 2 Two of these measures, denoted as EM1 and EM2 n the paper, are developed to capture the degree of earnngs management ntended to smooth a frm s reported earnngs. A thrd measure, EM3, consders the average magntude of 2 Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003) develop four country-level earnngs management measures whch do not adapt to our frm-level analyses. 3

5 dscretonary accruals over a specfc perod. The fourth measure, EM4, assesses a frm s tendency to avod reportng small losses. The descrptve analyss ndcates that all four earnngs management measures are strongly related to frm exchange rate exposure, nonetheless n dfferent drectons. Frms that are more aggressve n smoothng ther ncomes, as measured by EM1 and EM2, or that are more averse to report small losses, as assessed by EM4, tend to show lower exchange rate exposure, the fndng of whch s consstent wth our hypothess. To the contrary of our expectaton, those frms wth hgher level of dscretonary accruals (EM3) exhbt hgher exchange rate exposure. Further analyss s requred to resolve ths nconsstency. After controllng for other corporate factors of exchange rate exposures, the panel regressons fnd that a more aggressve earnngs management as revealed by the level of ncome smoothng (EM1 and EM2) or by the tendency of avodng small loss reportng (EM4) does show to be assocated wth lower exchange rate exposures. Ths evdence s consstent wth our hypothess that earnngs management mtgates frm exchange rate rsk exposures. However, the other earnngs management measure that proxes for the magntude of dscretonary accruals (EM3) stll demonstrates a postve relatonshp between earnngs management and stock return exchange rate exposure, a result nconsstent wth our hypothess. These results are not materally changed when other sample s consdered, e.g. large frms, small frms and frms wth zero foregn sales reportng. We re-examne the relaton between frm exchange rate exposure and the earnngs management measures at a ed pont n tme,.e., for sngle sample wndow one at a tme. The two ncome smoothng measures become the only measures exhbtng a prevalngly sgnfcant result, a result consstent wth our hypothess. Fnally, we examne whether the effect of earnngs management on frm exchange rate exposure remans the same durng favorable and unfavorable perods of currency movements. Two hypotheses are proposed to explan a frm s earnngs management behavors and ther mpact on the observed exchange rate exposure. Our evdence ndcates that the effects of earnngs management actvtes, especally those 4

6 amng to smooth reported ncome, become more pronounced durng adverse operatng condtons. Ths s consstent wth the opportunstc earnngs management hypothess, whch suggests that frms tend to engage n more earnngs management to stablze ther reported earnngs durng unfavorable perods, however, they may choose not to mask the benefcal operatng results of favorable perods. Ths paper contrbutes to the lterature by offerng a plausble explanaton for the falure of fndng strong evdence of prced exchange rate rsk for U.S. stocks. In addton, our emprcal results provde mplcatons for the nformaton contents of the correlaton between accruals and cash flows. To a certan extent, the result from our second ncome smoothng measure s consstent wth the argument that a greater correlaton between accruals and cash flows mples earnngs management. The remander of ths paper s organzed as follows. Secton 2 descrbes our methodology to measure frm exchange rate exposure and earnngs management. Secton 3 examnes the effect of earnngs management on frm exchange rate exposure and Secton 4 concludes. 2. Measurng exchange-rate exposure and earnngs management Inconsstent wth common ntuton and expectaton, exstng emprcal studes do not fnd sgnfcant evdence that the currency exchange rate rsk s prced for U.S. corporatons. Ths paper proposes to explan ths paradox wth the earnngs management actvtes employed by frms. Snce the behavors of manpulatng earnngs would mask a frm s real performance subject to unexpected exchange rate movements, nvestors may not evaluate accurately and tmely the mpact of exchange rate changes on a frm s market value. Ths then leads to the observed weak lnkage between exchange rate changes and contemporaneous stock returns. Ths secton descrbes the measure of frm exchange rate exposure and the proxy varables to assess the extent to whch managers manpulate earnngs usng ther fnancal reportng decsons. 5

7 2.1 Estmatng a frm s exchange-rate exposure Dumas (1978), Hodder (1982), and Adler and Dumas (1984) defne a frm s exchange rate exposure as the senstvty of a frm s market value to unexpected exchange rate varatons. 3 Adler and Dumas (1984) thereupon suggest that a frm s exchange-rate exposure can be best measured as the regresson coeffcent of the frm s market value on the contemporaneous foregn exchange rate(s). Joron (1990) further ncludes the market return n the regresson equaton to measure the exchange rate exposure. 4 Ths study modfes the prevous market-model based regresson and nstead employs the three-factor model suggested by Fama and French (1993). Moreover, as Amhud (1994) and Bartov and Bodnar (1994) document that lagged changes n foregn currency exchange rate demonstrate a sgnfcant effect on contemporaneous stock returns, we also nclude the lagged exchange rate change n the regresson equaton to ncorporate the possble delay n the market s reacton to exchange rate fluctuatons. The regresson model used n ths study to estmate a frm s exchange-rate exposure s as follows. R t 0 lagged - R ft = + β FX t + β FX t 1 β + β ( R - R ) + β SMB + β HML + ε m mt ft SMB t HML t t (1) In the regresson, R t s the stock return of frm n perod t, R ft s the rsk-free rate n perod t, FX t s the percentage change of the trade-weghted exchange rate ndex, measured as foregn currency per one unt of U.S. dollar n perod t, FX t 1 s the lagged percentage change n the exchange rate, R mt s the return on the market portfolo, SMB t s the dfference n the returns between value-weghed portfolos of small and bg stocks, and HML t s the dfference n the returns between value-weghted portfolos of hgh 3 Adler and Dumas (1984) defne exchange rate exposure wthout suggestng there exsts certan causaton between stock prces and exchange rates, nstead, both varables are endogenously determned. However, t can be safely assumed that exchange rates are exogenous for an ndvdual frm [see also He and Ng (1998) and Allayanns and Ofek (2001)]. 4 Many other related studes appled smlar methodology. See, e.g. Joron (1990, 1991), Amhud (1994), Bodnar and Gentry (1993), Allayanns (1996), He and Ng (1998), Allayanns and Ofek (2001) and Dodge, Grffn and Wllamson (2002). 6

8 book-to-market stocks and low book-to-market stocks. 5 To estmate stock return exchange-rate exposure, the selecton of an approprate measurement of foregn currency exchange rate, e.g. a trade-weghted exchange rate ndex or a blateral currency exchange rate, has been a debatable queston. It s common for a frm exposed to more than one currency [e.g., see Adler and Dumas (1984)]. However, the smultaneous ncluson of multple blateral exchange rates could encounter a mult-collnearty problem. Ths paper thus chooses to use the Bank of England nomnal trade-weghted exchange rate ndex to estmate the exchange rate exposures. The nomnal, nstead of real, exchange rate s appled here. Ths follows the consderatons that the gans and losses from foregn currency transactons recognzed n the accountng report are determned prmarly based on nomnal exchange rate changes and that the strateges employed by frms to mtgate the effect of adverse exchange rate fluctuatons are more lkely consdered on nomnal bass. Adler and Dumas (1984) suggest that the exchange-rate exposure may vary over tme. 6 Ths study estmates each frm s exchange-rate exposure over a three-year sample wndow wth monthly return data and re-estmates the exposures as the 3-year wndow rolls forward. Fve-year sample wndows are also tested and the results are not materally changed. In equaton (1), β measures the contemporaneous exchange rate exposure of frm for the specfc three-year sample wndow whle β measures the lagged response of exchange rate changes on the lagged stock return. 7 Bartov and Bodnar (1994) demonstrate that lagged dollar changes are a sgnfcant varable n explanng current abnormal returns of ther sample frms and suggest to use the combnaton of β and β lagged to measure the possble effect of gven dollar changes. In lght of ths, we use the sum of β and β to measure the exchange rate exposure of frm. Note that an ncrease (a decrease) n the lagged 5 We would lke to thank Professor Fama and French for sharng the three-factor data on French s webste. 6 See also Jorn (1990) and Allayanns (1997) 7 The coeffcents n equaton (1) are estmated based on ordnary least-squares regresson, and the standard errors are adjusted for heteroskedastcty and autocorrelaton. 7

9 BOE trade-weghted ndex ndcates a U.S. dollar apprecaton (deprecaton). Frms wth postve combned exposures are regarded as net mporters snce the dollar apprecaton s expected to show favorable (postve) effect on the frm stock returns. Conversely, frms wth negatve combned exposures are regarded as net exporters snce the dollar apprecaton s expected to have adverse (negatve) effect on the frm stock returns. 2.2 Measures of the Engagement of Earnngs Management Ths paper attempts to offer another explanaton, based on frms engagement of earnngs management, for the lack of strong evdence of sgnfcant relatonshp between dollar fluctuatons and stock returns. Exchange rate shocks affect the sales and costs of products and thus a frm s long-term operatng cash flows. Exchange rate movements also affect the domestc value of a cash flow when t s denomnated n foregn currency. A frm may adopt busness hedgng or fnancal hedgng schemes to reduce the effect of exchange rate shocks on operatng performance. The lterature on optmal hedgng theory has offered frm characterstcs that are assocated wth those frms wth strong motvaton to hedge. However, frms often cannot or wll not fully hedge away ther exchange rate rsk due to ether mplementaton constrants or possble negatve effect on frm performance. CEOs of these frms thus have strong ncentves to conceal the mpact of unexpected exchange rate fluctuatons through earnngs management. If managers do undertake earnngs management actvtes to wndow-dress ther reported operatng performance, nvestors cannot accurately and tmely evaluate a frm s exchange rate exposure. Ths then leads to the documented nsgnfcant contemporaneous relatons between exchange rate changes and stock returns. We thus hypothesze that those frms engaged wth greater magntude of earnngs management expect to experence wth lower exchange rate exposure. One needs frst to defne approprate measures of earnngs management to test ths earnngs management hypothess. In the lterature of earnngs management, the modfed Jones (1991) model s 8

10 wdely appled to measure the magntude of earnngs management when earnngs management s examned n relaton to partcular corporate events 8. Snce foregn currency actvtes are long-term ongong events for a frm, the modfed-jones model s apparently napproprate and dffcult to mplement. Alternatvely, Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003) proposed four frm-level measures of earnngs management, whch capture dfferent scopes of frm earnngs management, ncludng that managers can take actons to manpulate earnngs and that managers can avod reportng frms actual actvtes. In ths study we modfy ther measures to assess the magntude of earnngs management at frm level. The followng descrbes the four earnngs management measures used n our emprcal analyss. The frst and second measures, EM1 and EM2, evaluate a frm s degree of earnngs management based on the smoothng of ts reported earnngs. A thrd measure, EM3, assesses a frm s level of dscretonary accruals. Leuz et al. use the rato of absolute value of accruals deflated by cash flows from operatons to estmate the relatve level of manpulated accruals. Ths rato however does fully reflect the actual magntude of dscretonary accruals. Ths paper thus calculates the dscretonary accruals generated from the modfy Jones model to replace the EM3 beng used n the study of Leuz et al.. EM1 Degree of ncome smoothng: the relatve volatlty of operatng earnngs and operatng cash flow When exchange rate fluctuatons result n losses n frm operatng ncome, managers may be motvated to ncrease reported earnngs through accrual adjustments. It follows that frm exchange rate exposure may be reduced through earnngs smoothng. To modfy the EM1 from Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003), whch used the measure to evaluate the country-wde earnngs management, we calculate for each frm a rato of the standard devaton of quarterly operatng earnngs over the standard devaton of quarterly operatng cash flow. These two standard devatons are estmated from a three-year wndow 8 The modfed Jones model has been wdely appled for testng those events ncludng IPO, SEO, LBO, Reverse LBO among others. Those studes usually assume that pror to an event a frm has a normal magntude of accruals. Based on the modfed Jones model, the degree of earnngs management s proxed by a frm s dscretonary accruals, whch s defned as the dfference between a frm s actual accruals and ts expected accruals. In the applcaton, the expected accruals of a frm are estmated by the accruals of a set of matched frms. 9

11 durng whch a frm s exchange rate exposure s estmated. To control for the effect of frm sze, both operatng earnngs and cash flows from operatons are scaled by lagged total assets. A lower EM1 rato ndcates a greater accountng dscreton exercsed by managers and thus a hgher degree of earnngs management. EM1 s calculated as follows: IB σ t TA, t 1 EM1 = OANCF σ t TA, t 1, (2) where IB s the quarterly earnngs before extraordnary tems and dscontnued operatons, OANCF s the quarterly operatng cash flow, and TA s quarterly total assets. EM2 Degree of ncome smoothng: the correlaton between changes n accruals and changes n operatng cash flows Managers may use accruals to dmnsh economc shocks to the frm s cash flows from operatons. Snce cash flow shocks may be adjusted by accountng accruals, there s a negatve correlaton between changes n accruals and cash flows from operatons. Our second measure (EM2) s the contemporaneous correlaton between changes n accruals and changes n cash flows from operatons. A larger EM2 value ndcates a hgher correlaton n absolute value, whch suggests that managers have exercsed greater accountng dscreton to smooth earnngs. The expected relaton between EM2 and exchange rate exposure s not as clear as EM1 snce there has been no consensus on the nformaton contents about earnngs qualty conveyed by the correlaton between accruals and cash flows. Dechow and Dchev (2002) suggest that the negatve correlaton between accruals and cash flows s assocated wth earnngs qualty. However, there s no concluson as to whether EM2 s postvely or negatvely related to earnngs qualty [see, e.g. Dechow and Dchev (2002), Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003) and Wysock (2005)]. If EM2 s postvely assocated wth earnngs qualty, we would expect ts correspondng estmated exchange rate exposure should be hgh and thus result n a negatve 10

12 relaton between exchange rate exposure and EM2. In contrast, f the absolute value of EM2 can be nterpreted as an ndcator of earnngs management, t would be expected that a frm wth more the absolute value of EM2 wll take lower exchange rate exposure. That s, t results n a postve relaton between the absolute value of EM2 and exchange rate exposure. In lght of ths, our emprcal evdence thus has mplcatons for the nformaton contents about earnngs qualty shed from the correlaton between accruals changes and cash flow changes. Quarterly data of total accruals and operatng cash flows are used to calculate EM2 of ndvdual frm for the 3-year wndow durng whch a frm s exchange rate exposure s estmated. Both changes n accruals and changes n cash flows are scaled by lagged total assets. EM3 - Average magntude of dscretonary accruals In addton to earnngs smoothng, managers may use dscretonal accruals to manpulate the frm performance. Manageral dscreton n the accruals system provdes managers wth opportuntes to manpulate earnngs. Through accrual adjustments, managers may ncrease current reported earnngs whle have the dscrepances recovered from future reported earnngs. For the purpose of analyss, total accruals (TAC) can be decomposed nto nondscretonary accruals (NDAC) that are correlated wth frm performance, and dscretonary accruals that may cause earnngs to be systematcally managed. Our thrd measure of earnngs management (EM3) s to measure the degree of earnngs management based on the magntude of dscretonary accruals (DAC). Here, dscretonary accruals are defned as the dfference between total accruals and nondscretonary accruals 9. We use the modfed cross-sectonal Jones (1991) model to estmate those nondscretonary accruals that are dctated by frm condtons and ndependent of manageral manpulaton. 10 An ordnary least squares regresson of current accruals for a gven year s regressed on the change n sales and the level of property, plant and equpment (PP&E) for that year usng all matchng 9 Nondscretonary accruals present the normal level of total accruals that s assocated wth sales and nvestments of ed assets. 10 Ths cross-sectonal model has been wdely appled to estmate expected accruals, ncludng Teoh et al. (1998a, 1998b), Dechow, Sloan, and Sweeney (1995), and Rchardson (2000). 11

13 frms n the same two-dgt SIC code (?). Ths ntra-ndustry cross-sectonal regresson s estmated for each year over the sample perod from 1992 to All varables, ncludng the ntercept term, n the cross-sectonal regresson are deflated by the total assets of pror year to reduce the heteroskedastctes. The regresson s as follows: TAC TA jt j, t 1 1 REVjt PP & E jt = α 0( ) + α1( ) + α2( ) + ε TA TA TA j, t 1 j, t 1 j, t 1 jt (3) where TA j,t-1 s the total assets n year t 1, REV j,t s the change n sales n year t for frm j, TAC j,t s total accruals of frm j and s the dfference between net ncome and cash flows from operaton, and PP&E j,t s the gross property, plant, and equpment of frm j n year t. The nondscretonary total accruals scaled by assets (NDAC) and the dscretonary total accruals scaled by assets (DAC) are computed as: NDAC t 1 REV & ˆ ˆ t ARt PP E = 0( ) + 1( ) + ˆ t α α α2( ) (4) TA TA TA, t 1, t 1, t 1 DAC t TAC ( NDAC (4) t = ) TAt t where AR t s the change n account recevables for sample frm, ˆ α0, ˆ α1, and ˆ α 2 of equaton (4) denote estmates of α 0, α1, and α 2 from equaton (3). The DAC s our thrd choce of earnngs management measure - EM3. EM3 s expected to be postvely related to a frm s estmated exchange rate exposure f managers frequently manpulate ther frm s reported earnngs through adjusted accruals. EM4 Degree of small loss averson Hayn (1995) demonstrates that the volume of frms reportng small profts largely domnate those 12

14 frms reportng small losses. Degeoreg et al (1999) and Burgstahler and Dchev (1997) suggest that the overwhelmngly majorty of small-profts reportng can be attrbuted to earnngs management. Burgstahler and Dchev (1997) and Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003) use the rato of frms reportng small profts to frms wth small reported losses to measure the degree of earnngs management on the country level. However, Dechow, Rchardson and Tuna (2003) make a cauton of ths as they cannot fnd evdence that frms utlze dscretonary accruals to prevent small-loss reportng (check). In order to adapt ths measure to our frm level assessment of earnngs management, ths study uses the rato of the numbers of quarters wth small loss reportng to the total number of quarters wth non-mssng profts and losses data as a measure of a frm s tendency to avod reportng small losses. To calculate EM4, we requre the sample frm to have at least ten quarters wth non-mssng profts or losses data wthn the sample wndow correspondng to the estmaton of exchange rate exposure. Ths measure s desgned based on the followng two assumptons: frst, frms are unwllng to recognze losses n ther accountng report. Second, a small loss s much easer to be altered than a large loss. Based on the two assumptons, those frms that do not avod recognzng small losses n ther accountng report are expected to engage less n earnngs management. A hgher score of EM4 thus mples a lower level of earnngs management and expects to be assocated wth a hgher exchange rate exposure. Small losses are defned to be n the range [ 0.01, 0.00) and small profts are defned to be n the range [0.00, 0.01]. In order to compute a relable rato, we requre at least ten quarterly observatons of losses and profts for a frm. 2.3 Sample selecton and descrptve statstcs Our sample covers those non-fnancal frms n COMPUSTAT. To be ncluded n the sample, frms must have average total assets greater than 500 mllon dollars over the sample perod and have postve foregn sales. The total sample perod extends from 1992 to It s dvded nto nne overlapped sub-perods each coverng three years. Only those frms wth non-mssng data of prce seres, total assets, 13

15 total sales, and market value over the total sample perod are ncluded n the fnal sample. Prevous studes have documented sgnfcant evdence of earnngs management at the tme of IPOs [see Teoh, Welch and Wong (1998a) and Teoh,Wang, and Rao (1998)]. Our sample excludes those frms that went publc after January 1, 1991 and only those wth non-mssng data on prce seres are ncluded n the fnal sample. Ths crteron mtgates the potental bas due to the earnngs management actvtes before IPOs. Each sample frm s exchange rate exposure s estmated by equaton (1) usng monthly return data, whch are collected from the CRSP database. We use the CRSP value-weghted ndex return of the NYSE, AMEX, and NASDAQ composte ndexes to proxy for the market return. The US dollar trade-weghted exchange rate by Bank of England s retreved from the Datastream database. Followng earler studes, our sample ncludes those frms wth non-zero foregn sales, a prelmnary ndcator for a frm s foregn nvolvement. Usng a sample wth a profle smlar to prevous studes allows us to compare the emprcal results and test our hypothess. Descrptve statstcs Table 1 reports the descrptve statstcs of the exchange-rate exposures estmated from equaton (1) and the frm factors consdered for determnng frm exchange rate exposures. The absolute value of the sum of β and β represents a frm s exchange rate exposure. Panel A shows that the mean and lagged medan absolute value of combned exposure, β + β 14 lagged, for all frms s equal to and As shown n Panel B and Panel C, the mean combned exposure for frms wth postve combned exposure (net mporters) and for frms wth negatve exposure (net exporters) s and 1.119, respectvely. Note that the foregn sales rato, export sales rato and frm sze are roughly the same between postve and negatve exposure frms. Table 1 also reports the summary statstcs for our four earnngs management measures. The two ncome smoothng measures (EM1 and EM2) of postve exposure frms are slghtly greater than those of negatve exposure frms. Snce hgher scores of EM1 and EM2 mply lower degree of

16 earnngs management, ths result ndcates that net mporters on average engage less n earnngs smoothng than net exporters. The other two earnngs management measures (EM3 and EM4) do not materally dffer between postve exposure frms and negatve exposure frms. [ Insert Table 1 Here ] Earnngs management and exchange rate exposure: a prelmnary analyss Pror researches dd not fnd a prevalng evdence of a sgnfcant relatonshp between exchange rate fluctuatons and contemporaneous stock returns even when the samples were lmted to frms wth certan level of foregn nvolvement. Ths study tests the hypothess that the observed weak lnkage between exchange rate changes and stock returns s at least partly attrbutable to the earnngs management. [ Insert Table 2 Here ] Table 2 presents the prelmnary analyss, wthout controllng for other factors, of the relatonshp between earnngs management and exchange rate exposure. We partton the sample frms nto quartles (Q1, Q2, Q3 and Q4) based on the scores of each earnngs management measure. Note that for the two ncome smoothng measures (EM1 and EM2), hgher scores mply less earnngs management. On the contrary, for the magntude of dscretonary accruals measure (EM3), hgher scores mply a more aggressve earnngs management. We put those frms wth the hghest level of earnngs management n Q4 and those wth the lowest level of earnngs management n Q1. For the small-loss averson measure (EM4), the sample frms are parttoned nto two groups, namely Zero and Non-Zero. The Zero group contans those frms never reportng small quarterly losses durng the 3-year wndow and the Non-zero group conssts of those frms reportng small losses n more than one quarter durng the same perod. Frms n the Zero group are regarded as conductng an aggressve earnngs management and those n the Non-Zero group are regarded as practcng a conservatve earnngs management. Based on our hypothess that earnngs management reduces frm exchange rate exposure, we expect those frms n Q1 and Non-zero 15

17 group to have greater exchange rate exposure whle those frms n Q4 and Zero group to have lower exchange rate exposure. Panel A of Table 2 reports the dstrbuton of exchange rate exposure across earnngs management quartles for the entre sample frms. All earnngs management measures, wth the excepton of EM3, exhbt a relatonshp wth exchange rate exposure consstent wth our hypothess. Takng the example of our frst ncome smoothng measure, EM1, the mean exchange rate exposure s equal to 1.380, 1.050, and for those frms n the group of Q1 (most conservatve), Q2, Q3, and Q4 (most aggressve), respectvely. Smlar patterns exst when β and β lagged are consdered separately. The evdence from ncome smoothng measures s consstent wth our hypothess that a more aggressve earnngs management wll decrease a frm s observed exchange rate exposure. The results of the small-losses averson measure (EM4) also support our earnngs management hypothess. The mean exchange rate exposure, β + β lagged, s equal to and for Non-zero (conservatve) group and Zero (aggressve) group. Unlke other measures, the statstcs of EM3, the most commonly used ndcator of earnngs management, exhbts dfferent pattern and are contrary to our hypothess. The mean exchange rate lagged exposure, β + β, for Q1 (most conservatve), Q2, Q3, and Q4 (most aggressve) s equal to 0.828, 0.984, and Ths ndcates that frms wth hgher magntude of dscretonary accruals tend to have hgher observed exchange rate exposure. Same tendency s found when β and β lagged consdered separately. The paradoxcal results thus call for the testng the effect of earnngs management on frm exchange rate exposure when other related varables are accounted for. are 3. Exchange-rate exposure and earnngs management: a regresson model The prelmnary analyss n prevous secton reveals that there exsts lnkage between earnngs management and estmated exchange rate exposure, although varous earnngs management measures proxy 16

18 for dfferent earnngs management behavors exhbt nconsstent patterns. In ths secton, we examne the mpact of earnngs management on a frm s estmated exchange rate exposure whle controllng for other varables related to frm exchange rate exposure. We hypothesze that earnngs management reduces a frm s estmated exchange rate exposure f earnngs management masks a frm s real performance. 3.1 Exstng Hypotheses/Theores on Frm Factors Determnng Exchange Rate Exposure Due to the falure n uncoverng a sgnfcant relaton between exchange rate changes and stock returns, many studes had focused on the determnants of exchange-rate exposure [e.g. Joron (1991), Amhud (1994), Bartov and Bodnar (1994), He and Ng (1998), Allayanns and Ofek (2001), Marston (2001) and Dodge et al. (2002)]. Buldng on exstng studes, two groups of factors are suggested and found as mportant determnants affectng a frm s exchange-rate exposure: the level of foregn nvolvement and hedgng actvtes. The level of foregn nvolvement It s a consensus that the level of a frm s foregn nvolvement or nternatonal actvtes s an mportant determnant of frm exchange rate exposure. Many studes have documented that frms wth greater foregn nvolvement are exposed to hgher exchange rate rsk [e.g. Joron (1991), He and Ng (1998), Allayanns and Ofek (2001) and Dodge et al. (2002)]. Consderng the data avalablty, ths study uses frm sze (SIZE), the export rato (EXPORT), and the foregn sales rato (FSALE) as control varables representng a frm s foregn nvolvement. Theory of optmal hedgng Dumas (1978) s one of the earlest researchers suggestng that the actual mpact of exchange rate rsk on frm value s not only determned by a frm s nternatonal actvtes but also by ts engagement of 17

19 hedgng, both fnancal and operatng hedgng actvtes. Indeed, a company may utlze fnancal nstruments as well as operatng dversfcaton to mtgate the cash flow fluctuatons due to exchange rate changes. In an mperfectly compettve market, stock prces should reflect a frm s expected hedgng actvtes. A negatve relaton expects to be observed between the exchange rate exposure and the hedgng actvtes. Exstng studes have substantated the hypothess and fnd that U.S. corporatons use fnancal nstruments to mtgate ther exposure to exchange rate fluctuatons. [see Rawls and Smthson (1989), Dolde (1993), Allayanns and Ofek (2001), and Allayanns and Weston (2001)]. Pror lterature assocated wth theores of optmal hedgng has suggested several hypotheses to explan why a frm engages n hedgng. Frst, hedgng can reduce the transacton costs of fnancal dstress and then mtgate the probablty of bankruptcy. Frms wth greater probablty of or hgher transacton cost from fnancal dstress are thus more motvated to undertake hedgng actvtes. [see Smth and Warner (1979), Smth and Stulz (1985), Nance et al. (1993), and Geczy et al. (1997)]. Ths study ncludes fnancal leverage, ROA and dvdend yeld to control a frm s hedgng ncentves for mtgatng ts costs or probablty of fnancal dstress. Frms wth hgher fnancal leverage, lower ROA 11 and hgher dvdend yeld are classfed as beng suffered hgher fnancal dstress cost or probablty and are expected to undertake more hedgng actvtes to reduce exchange rate exposure. Second, Froot et al (1993) extends Myers (1977) agency cost hypothess and suggests that the undernvestment problem can be mtgated by hedgng as hedgng actvtes reduce the cash flow volatlty and thus make external fnancng less costly. Ths study employs the followng varables to control for a frm s ncentves to reduce ts undernvestment problems: the market-to-book rato (MB), R&D expendture as a rato of sales (R&D) 12 and dvdend yeld (dv). Frms wth hgher market-to-book rato, hgher R&D expendture rato and lower dvdend yeld are expected to engage n more hedgng actvtes and thus are assocated wth lower exchange rate exposure. 11 See Nance et al. (1993) and He and Ng (1998). 12 The R&D expendture s mostly mssng for our sample frms. We also use captal expense rato to proxy for frm growth opportunty, and the results generally reman unchanged. 18

20 Fnally, the hedgng costs also affect a frm s decson to use hedgng nstruments. Due to the large start-up costs, a frm s hedgng ncentves are subject to economes of scale. Sze, already ncluded as a proxy for a frm s foregn nvolvement, s also consdered as a control varable for a frm s relatve hedgng costs. Under ths consderaton, frms wth larger sze are assocated wth lower hedgng costs and are more motvated to engage n hedgng. Busness hedgng Ths study also recognzes that the hypotheses of hedgng ncentves and actvtes derved from optmal hedgng theores also apply to operatng hedgng. A frm may typcally mtgate ts exchange rate exposure by geographc or busness dversfcaton. COMPUSTAT provdes two knds of dversfcaton data, the number of geographc segments and busness segments n whch a frm s engaged. We focus on busness segments snce the number of geographc segments tends to be sgnfcantly correlated wth foregn sales rato and frms wth more geographc segments tend to have hgher exchange rate exposure. We would expect that frms engagng n greater number of busness segment can dversfy ther currency rsk and thus have lower exchange rate exposure. When a frm s engaged n multple busness segments, the dummy varable, Dseg, s set to 1 and 0 otherwse. 13 Ths varable proxes for the dversfcaton of a frm s cash flow sources, and thus the degree of busness hedgng. It s expected that Dseg wll be negatvely correlated wth frm currency rsk exposure The Panel Regresson A two-stage framework smlar to He and Hg (1998) and Allayanns and Ofek (2001) s employed to further document the mpact of earnngs management on a frm s exchange rate exposure whle controllng other factors related to exchange rate exposure. Dfferng from He and Hg (1998) and Allayanns and Ofek 13 Lang and Stulz (1994), Berger and Ofek (1995), and Allayanns and Weston (2001) have appled a smlar measure to serve as a proxy for a frm s ndustral dversfcaton, and examne ts relatonshp wth frm value. Allayanns and Weston (2001) fnd that ndustral dversfcaton ncreases frm value, whch s consstent wth our hypothess. 19

21 (2001), we apply the approach repeatedly over a longer sample span, nstead of a sngle ed perod. That s, for each year t when the control varables proxy for a frm s foregn nvolvement and hedgng actvtes are recorded, we estmate each frm s exchange rate exposure and the four earnngs management measures from the three years wndow (year t-1 to year t+1) surroundng year t. In the frst stage, Eq. (2) s used to estmate ndvdual frm s exchange rate exposure for each three-year wndow. Earnngs management measures are also calculated for the correspondng wndow over whch exchange rate exposure s estmated. Snce our sample perod covers 11 years, we construct a total of 9 partal overlappng three-year wndows, , , , , , , , and respectvely. In the second stage, we regress a frm s exchange rate exposure estmated from frst stage on the earnngs management measures and the control varables wth a panel regresson model as follows: ˆ β + γ J ˆ lagged, j + β, j = j = 1 6, j MB, j + γ 7, j RD, j D γ j + γ 0, j 8, j + γ 1, j SIZE EXPORT, j, j + γ + γ 9 j 2 j Dseg Fsale, j, j + γ + γ 3, j 10 j DAT EM, j, j + γ + ε, j 4, j ROA, j + γ 5, j DIV, j, (5) where ˆ β s the measure of combned exchange rate exposure as estmated from equaton (1) lagged j + ˆ, β, j for frm durng wndow j. Ths method takes advantage of tme-varyng estmates of exchange rate exposure and earnngs management measures generated from our movng wndow calculatons, and yelds greater testng power due to the expanded observatons. A Feasble GLS s mplemented to account for possble autocorrelatons n the resduals Emprcal results Table 3 presents the regresson results of equaton (3), whch tests the relaton between earnngs management and estmated exchange rate exposure whle controllng for varables related to a frm s 20

22 foregn nvolvement and hedgng ncentves. In the frst column of Table 3, the ndependent varables are ordered as factors assocated wth a frm s foregn nvolvement, hedgng ncentves, and earnngs management. We hypothesze that the market or nvestors cannot accurately evaluate a frm s exchange rate exposure f the frm engages n earnngs management to mask ts true performance subject to exchange rate changes. The estmated exchange rate exposure s thus expected to be negatvely related to earnngs management level. Our analyses focus on the sgn and sgnfcance of the four earnngs management measures. The second column n Table 3 lsts the expected sgn of the four earnngs management measures). Panel A of Table 3 lsts the results for all frms. Consstent wth our expectaton, the two ncome smoothng measures, EM1 and EM2, are sgnfcantly and postvely related to estmated combned exchange rate exposure no matter other earnngs management measure(s) s/are ncluded or not. Snce lower scores of EM1 and EM2 mply hgher degree of earnngs management and are hypotheszed to be assocated wth lower exchange rate exposure. The postve relaton between ncome smoothng measures and exchange rate exposure thus ndcate that the earnngs management actvtes for ncome smoothng purposes do reduce exchange rate exposure beng estmated by stock market. The results of small-loss avodance measure, EM4, also sgnfcantly support our hypothess. We fnd that EM4 s also postvely related to exchange rate exposure n all regresson combnatons. On the other hand, the sgnfcance of the magntude of dscretonary accruals measure, EM3, s much lower than other earnngs management measures. Ths s consstent wth our expectaton. However, the sgn of EM3 are postve n all regresson combnatons, ths s stll a confusng results ndcatng that the hgher magntude of dscretonary accrual s assocated wth the hgher estmated exchange rate exposure. [ Insert Table 3 Here ] Panel B of Table 3 shows the results for postve exposure frms (net mporters). Consstent wth the hypothess, frms wth hgher EM1, EM2 and EM4 are postvely related estmated exchange rate exposure. On the contrary, the results of EM3 stll do not support our hypothess. Panel C of Table 3 shows the results 21

23 for negatve exposure frms (net exporters). The results are smlar to all frms and postve exposure frms. Other varables also exhbt sgnfcantly explanatory abltes, e.g., Sze, dvdend yeld, R&D and fnancal leverage. We also fnd some evdence n Table 3 whle comparng postve and negatve exposure frms. Among the foregn nvolvement factors, both export rato and foregn sales rato are postvely and sgnfcantly related to exchange rate exposure for net exporters (frms wth negatve exposure). Ths s consstent wth our expectaton that hgher foregn nvolvement wll ncrease frm exchange rate exposure. On the contrary, the two foregn nvolvement varables are nsgnfcantly related to exchange rate exposure for net mporters (frms wth postve exposure). Snce the foregn revenues n excess of foregn costs wll offset the benefts (losses) form the U.S. dollar apprecaton (deprecaton) and thus mtgate a net mporter s exchange rate exposure, foregn sales s expected to be negatvely or at least nsgnfcantly related to a net mporter s exchange rate exposure. The evdence thus confrms our methodology to partton sample frms nto net mporters or net exporters. Ths s mportant snce some conjectures below depend on the correct partton of net mporters and net exporters. 4. Summary It has long been puzzled that studes do not offer a prevalng evdence of sgnfcant relatonshp between exchange rate rsk and stock returns of U.S. corporatons. Ths paper proposes that earnngs management may be an mportant determnant of frm exchange rate exposure n that the market partcpants cannot correctly evaluate the mpact of exchange rate changes on frm value when a frm s engaged n earnngs manpulaton. We thus hypothesze that frms employng greater levels of earnngs management wll reduce more of ther exchange rate exposure assessed by the stock market. Ths study estmates a frm s exchange rate exposure usng the Fama-French three-factor model. The sum of current and lagged exposure coeffcents s used to measure a frm s exchange rate exposure. We 22

24 calculate four earnngs management measures at frm level by followng the study of Leuz, Nanda, and Wysock (2003). Consstent wth our hypothess, frms engaged wth more aggressve earnngs management actvtes, especally those amng at ncome smoothng, tend to have sgnfcantly lower exchange rate exposure. A further analyss fnds that the effect of earnngs management on frm exchange rate exposure becomes strengthened when the currency movements are adverse to frm earnngs. Ths evdence supports the opportunstc earnngs management hypothess that managers only smooth ther reported earnngs durng adverse perods whle enjoy the profts durng favorable perods. Our results also have mplcatons for the nformaton contents about earnngs qualty shed from the correlaton between accruals changes and cash flow changes. Our second ncome smoothng proxy, measured as the correlaton between accruals changes and cash flow changes, s found sgnfcantly postvely assocated wth exchange rate exposure. Ths ndcates that to a certan extent, greater correlaton between changes of accruals and changes of cash flow mples earnngs management. 23

25 References Adler, M., and B. Dumas (1984), Exposure to Currency Rsk: Defnton and Measurement, Fnancal Management, Vol. 13, pp Allayanns, G. (1997), The tme varaton of exchange rate exposure: An ndustry analyss, workng paper, Unversty of Vrgna. Allayanns, G. and E. Ofek (2001), Exchange-Rate Exposure, Hedgng, and the Use of Foregn Currency Dervatves, Journal of Internatonal Money and Fnance, Vol. 20, pp Allayanns, G. and J. Weston (2001), The Use of Foregn Currency Dervatves and Frm Market Value, Revew of Fnancal Studes, Vol. 14, pp Amhud, Y. (1994), Exchange Rates and the Valuaton of Equty Shares, n Yakov Amhud and Rchard M. Levch, eds: Exchange Rates and Corporate Performance, (New York, Irwn). Bartov, E. and G.M. Bodnar (1994), Frm Valuaton, Earnngs Expectatons, and the Exchange-rate Exposure Effect, Journal of Fnance, Vol. 49, pp Berger, P. and E. Ofek (1999), Causes and Effects of Corporate Refocusng Programs, Revew of Fnancal Studes, Vol. 12, pp Bodnar, G.M. and M. Wong (2003), Estmatng Exchange Rate Exposures: Issues n Model Structure, Fnancal Management, Vol. 32, pp Bodnar, G.M. and W.M. Gentry (1993), Exchange Rate Exposure and Industry Characterstcs: Evdence from Canada, Japan, and the USA, Journal of Internatonal Money and Fnance, Vol. 12, pp Burgstahler, D. C. and I. D. Dchev (1997), Earnngs Management to Avod Earnngs Decreases and Losses, Journal of Accountng and Economcs, Vol.24, pp Chow, E.H., W.Y. Lee, and M.E. Solt (1997a), The Exchange-rate Rsk Exposure of Asset Returns, Journal of Busness, Vol. 70, pp Chow, E.H., W.Y. Lee, and M.E. Solt (1997b), The Economc Exposure of U.S. Multnatonal Frms, Journal of Fnancal Research, Vol. 20, pp

26 Dechow, P. (1994), Accountng earnngs and cash flows as measures of frm performance: The role of accountng accruals, Journal of Accountng and Economcs, Vol.18, pp Dechow, P. M., R. G. Sloan and A. P. Sweeney (1995), Detectng Earnngs Management, The Accountng Revew, Vol.70, pp Dechow, P. and Dchev, I. (2002), The qualty of accruals and earnngs: The role of accrual estmaton errors, The Accountng Revew, Vol.77 (Supplement), pp Dechow, P. M., S. A. RICHARDSON and I. TUNA (2003), Why Are Earnngs Knky? An Examnaton of the Earnngs Management Explanaton, Revew of Accountng Studes, Vol.8, pp Degeorge, F., J. Patel and R. Zeckhauser (1999), Earnngs Management to Exceed Thresholds, The Journal of Busness, Vol.72, pp D Ioro, A. and R. Faff (2000), An Analyss of Asymmetry n Foregn Currency Exposure of the Australan Equtes Market, Journal of Multnatonal Fnancal Management, Vol. 10, pp Dolde, W. (1993), The Trajectory of Corporate Fnancal Rsk Management, Journal of Appled Corporate Fnance, Vol. 6, pp Dodge, C.A., J. Grffn, and R. Wllamson (2002), Does Exchange Rate Exposure Matter?, SSRN Workng Paper. Dumas, B. (1978), The Theory of the Tradng Frm Revsted, Journal of Fnance, Vol. 33, pp Fama, E.F. and K.R. French (1989), Busness Condtons and Expected Returns on Stocks and Bonds, Journal of Fnancal Economcs, Vol. 25, pp Froot, K., D. Scharfsten, and J. Sten (1993), Rsk Management: Coordnatng Corporate Investment and Fnancng Polces, Journal of Fnance, Vol. 48, pp Geczy, C., B.A. Mnton, and C. Schrand (1997), Why Frms Use Currency Dervatves?, Journal of Fnance, Vol.52, pp Grffn, J. M. and R.M. Stulz (2001), Internatonal Competton and Exchange Rate Shocks: A Cross-Country Industry Analyss of Stock Returns, Revew of Fnancal Studes, Vol. 14, pp. 25

THE VOLATILITY OF EQUITY MUTUAL FUND RETURNS

THE VOLATILITY OF EQUITY MUTUAL FUND RETURNS North Amercan Journal of Fnance and Bankng Research Vol. 4. No. 4. 010. THE VOLATILITY OF EQUITY MUTUAL FUND RETURNS Central Connectcut State Unversty, USA. E-mal: BelloZ@mal.ccsu.edu ABSTRACT I nvestgated

More information

Evaluating Performance

Evaluating Performance 5 Chapter Evaluatng Performance In Ths Chapter Dollar-Weghted Rate of Return Tme-Weghted Rate of Return Income Rate of Return Prncpal Rate of Return Daly Returns MPT Statstcs 5- Measurng Rates of Return

More information

Foreign Exchange Exposures, Financial and Operational Hedge Strategies of Taiwan Firms

Foreign Exchange Exposures, Financial and Operational Hedge Strategies of Taiwan Firms Foregn Exchange Exposures, Fnancal and Operatonal Hedge Strateges of Tawan Frms AUTHORS ARTICLE INFO JOURNAL Y-Chen Chang, Hu-Ju Ln Y-Chen Chang and Hu-Ju Ln (7). Foregn Exchange Exposures, Fnancal and

More information

MgtOp 215 Chapter 13 Dr. Ahn

MgtOp 215 Chapter 13 Dr. Ahn MgtOp 5 Chapter 3 Dr Ahn Consder two random varables X and Y wth,,, In order to study the relatonshp between the two random varables, we need a numercal measure that descrbes the relatonshp The covarance

More information

Financial Crisis and Foreign Exchange Exposure of Korean Exporting Firms

Financial Crisis and Foreign Exchange Exposure of Korean Exporting Firms Fnancal Crss and Foregn Exchange Exposure of Korean Exportng Frms Jae-Young Cho a, Ronald A. Ratt b*, Sung-Wook Yoon c a Mnstry of Plannng and Budget, 520-3, Banpo-dong, Seocho-gu, Seoul 137-756, Korea

More information

Tests for Two Correlations

Tests for Two Correlations PASS Sample Sze Software Chapter 805 Tests for Two Correlatons Introducton The correlaton coeffcent (or correlaton), ρ, s a popular parameter for descrbng the strength of the assocaton between two varables.

More information

Domestic Savings and International Capital Flows

Domestic Savings and International Capital Flows Domestc Savngs and Internatonal Captal Flows Martn Feldsten and Charles Horoka The Economc Journal, June 1980 Presented by Mchael Mbate and Chrstoph Schnke Introducton The 2 Vews of Internatonal Captal

More information

R Square Measure of Stock Synchronicity

R Square Measure of Stock Synchronicity Internatonal Revew of Busness Research Papers Vol. 7. No. 1. January 2011. Pp. 165 175 R Square Measure of Stock Synchroncty Sarod Khandaker* Stock market synchroncty s a new area of research for fnance

More information

Clearing Notice SIX x-clear Ltd

Clearing Notice SIX x-clear Ltd Clearng Notce SIX x-clear Ltd 1.0 Overvew Changes to margn and default fund model arrangements SIX x-clear ( x-clear ) s closely montorng the CCP envronment n Europe as well as the needs of ts Members.

More information

Measurement and Management of Exchange Rate Exposure: New Approach and Evidence

Measurement and Management of Exchange Rate Exposure: New Approach and Evidence Measurement and Management of Exchange Rate Exposure: New Approach and Evdence Taek Ho Kwon a, Sung C. Bae b,*, Rae Soo Park c January 2013 * Correspondng author; Tel) 419-372-8714; E-mal) bae@bgsu.edu

More information

Money, Banking, and Financial Markets (Econ 353) Midterm Examination I June 27, Name Univ. Id #

Money, Banking, and Financial Markets (Econ 353) Midterm Examination I June 27, Name Univ. Id # Money, Bankng, and Fnancal Markets (Econ 353) Mdterm Examnaton I June 27, 2005 Name Unv. Id # Note: Each multple-choce queston s worth 4 ponts. Problems 20, 21, and 22 carry 10, 8, and 10 ponts, respectvely.

More information

SYSTEMATIC LIQUIDITY, CHARACTERISTIC LIQUIDITY AND ASSET PRICING. Duong Nguyen* Tribhuvan N. Puri*

SYSTEMATIC LIQUIDITY, CHARACTERISTIC LIQUIDITY AND ASSET PRICING. Duong Nguyen* Tribhuvan N. Puri* SYSTEMATIC LIQUIDITY, CHARACTERISTIC LIQUIDITY AND ASSET PRICING Duong Nguyen* Trbhuvan N. Pur* Address for correspondence: Trbhuvan N. Pur, Professor of Fnance Char, Department of Accountng and Fnance

More information

REFINITIV INDICES PRIVATE EQUITY BUYOUT INDEX METHODOLOGY

REFINITIV INDICES PRIVATE EQUITY BUYOUT INDEX METHODOLOGY REFINITIV INDICES PRIVATE EQUITY BUYOUT INDEX METHODOLOGY 1 Table of Contents INTRODUCTION 3 TR Prvate Equty Buyout Index 3 INDEX COMPOSITION 3 Sector Portfolos 4 Sector Weghtng 5 Index Rebalance 5 Index

More information

Final Exam. 7. (10 points) Please state whether each of the following statements is true or false. No explanation needed.

Final Exam. 7. (10 points) Please state whether each of the following statements is true or false. No explanation needed. Fnal Exam Fall 4 Econ 8-67 Closed Book. Formula Sheet Provded. Calculators OK. Tme Allowed: hours Please wrte your answers on the page below each queston. (5 ponts) Assume that the rsk-free nterest rate

More information

FM303. CHAPTERS COVERED : CHAPTERS 5, 8 and 9. LEARNER GUIDE : UNITS 1, 2 and 3.1 to 3.3. DUE DATE : 3:00 p.m. 19 MARCH 2013

FM303. CHAPTERS COVERED : CHAPTERS 5, 8 and 9. LEARNER GUIDE : UNITS 1, 2 and 3.1 to 3.3. DUE DATE : 3:00 p.m. 19 MARCH 2013 Page 1 of 11 ASSIGNMENT 1 ST SEMESTER : FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 3 () CHAPTERS COVERED : CHAPTERS 5, 8 and 9 LEARNER GUIDE : UNITS 1, 2 and 3.1 to 3.3 DUE DATE : 3:00 p.m. 19 MARCH 2013 TOTAL MARKS : 100 INSTRUCTIONS

More information

On the Style Switching Behavior of Mutual Fund Managers

On the Style Switching Behavior of Mutual Fund Managers On the Style Swtchng Behavor of Mutual Fund Managers Bart Frjns Auckland Unversty of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand Auckland Centre for Fnancal Research Aaron Glbert Auckland Unversty of Technology,

More information

Market Opening and Stock Market Behavior: Taiwan s Experience

Market Opening and Stock Market Behavior: Taiwan s Experience Internatonal Journal of Busness and Economcs, 00, Vol., No., 9-5 Maret Openng and Stoc Maret Behavor: Tawan s Experence Q L * Department of Economcs, Texas A&M Unversty, U.S.A. and Department of Economcs,

More information

ECONOMETRICS - FINAL EXAM, 3rd YEAR (GECO & GADE)

ECONOMETRICS - FINAL EXAM, 3rd YEAR (GECO & GADE) ECONOMETRICS - FINAL EXAM, 3rd YEAR (GECO & GADE) May 17, 2016 15:30 Frst famly name: Name: DNI/ID: Moble: Second famly Name: GECO/GADE: Instructor: E-mal: Queston 1 A B C Blank Queston 2 A B C Blank Queston

More information

ISE High Income Index Methodology

ISE High Income Index Methodology ISE Hgh Income Index Methodology Index Descrpton The ISE Hgh Income Index s desgned to track the returns and ncome of the top 30 U.S lsted Closed-End Funds. Index Calculaton The ISE Hgh Income Index s

More information

Risk and Return: The Security Markets Line

Risk and Return: The Security Markets Line FIN 614 Rsk and Return 3: Markets Professor Robert B.H. Hauswald Kogod School of Busness, AU 1/25/2011 Rsk and Return: Markets Robert B.H. Hauswald 1 Rsk and Return: The Securty Markets Lne From securtes

More information

Real Exchange Rate Fluctuations, Wage Stickiness and Markup Adjustments

Real Exchange Rate Fluctuations, Wage Stickiness and Markup Adjustments Real Exchange Rate Fluctuatons, Wage Stckness and Markup Adjustments Yothn Jnjarak and Kanda Nakno Nanyang Technologcal Unversty and Purdue Unversty January 2009 Abstract Motvated by emprcal evdence on

More information

3/3/2014. CDS M Phil Econometrics. Vijayamohanan Pillai N. Truncated standard normal distribution for a = 0.5, 0, and 0.5. CDS Mphil Econometrics

3/3/2014. CDS M Phil Econometrics. Vijayamohanan Pillai N. Truncated standard normal distribution for a = 0.5, 0, and 0.5. CDS Mphil Econometrics Lmted Dependent Varable Models: Tobt an Plla N 1 CDS Mphl Econometrcs Introducton Lmted Dependent Varable Models: Truncaton and Censorng Maddala, G. 1983. Lmted Dependent and Qualtatve Varables n Econometrcs.

More information

Chapter 10 Making Choices: The Method, MARR, and Multiple Attributes

Chapter 10 Making Choices: The Method, MARR, and Multiple Attributes Chapter 0 Makng Choces: The Method, MARR, and Multple Attrbutes INEN 303 Sergy Butenko Industral & Systems Engneerng Texas A&M Unversty Comparng Mutually Exclusve Alternatves by Dfferent Evaluaton Methods

More information

EARNINGS MANAGEMENT IN NON-PROFIT HOSPITALS - EVIDENCE FROM TAIWAN

EARNINGS MANAGEMENT IN NON-PROFIT HOSPITALS - EVIDENCE FROM TAIWAN Internatonal Journal of Electronc Busness Management, Vol. 9, No. 3, pp. 243-257 (2011) 243 EARNINGS MANAGEMENT IN NON-PROFIT HOSPITALS - EVIDENCE FROM TAIWAN Hu-Fang Tan * Department of Health Care Admnstraton

More information

Spatial Variations in Covariates on Marriage and Marital Fertility: Geographically Weighted Regression Analyses in Japan

Spatial Variations in Covariates on Marriage and Marital Fertility: Geographically Weighted Regression Analyses in Japan Spatal Varatons n Covarates on Marrage and Martal Fertlty: Geographcally Weghted Regresson Analyses n Japan Kenj Kamata (Natonal Insttute of Populaton and Socal Securty Research) Abstract (134) To understand

More information

Tests for Two Ordered Categorical Variables

Tests for Two Ordered Categorical Variables Chapter 253 Tests for Two Ordered Categorcal Varables Introducton Ths module computes power and sample sze for tests of ordered categorcal data such as Lkert scale data. Assumng proportonal odds, such

More information

Highlights of the Macroprudential Report for June 2018

Highlights of the Macroprudential Report for June 2018 Hghlghts of the Macroprudental Report for June 2018 October 2018 FINANCIAL STABILITY DEPARTMENT Preface Bank of Jamaca frequently conducts assessments of the reslence and strength of the fnancal system.

More information

2) In the medium-run/long-run, a decrease in the budget deficit will produce:

2) In the medium-run/long-run, a decrease in the budget deficit will produce: 4.02 Quz 2 Solutons Fall 2004 Multple-Choce Questons ) Consder the wage-settng and prce-settng equatons we studed n class. Suppose the markup, µ, equals 0.25, and F(u,z) = -u. What s the natural rate of

More information

TRADING RULES IN HOUSING MARKETS WHAT CAN WE LEARN? GREG COSTELLO Curtin University of Technology

TRADING RULES IN HOUSING MARKETS WHAT CAN WE LEARN? GREG COSTELLO Curtin University of Technology ABSTRACT TRADING RULES IN HOUSING MARKETS WHAT CAN WE LEARN? GREG COSTELLO Curtn Unversty of Technology Ths paper examnes the applcaton of tradng rules n testng nformatonal effcency n housng markets. The

More information

Hybrid Tail Risk and Expected Stock Returns: When Does the Tail Wag the Dog?

Hybrid Tail Risk and Expected Stock Returns: When Does the Tail Wag the Dog? Hybrd Tal Rsk and Expected Stock Returns: When Does the Tal Wag the Dog? Turan G. Bal, a Nusret Cakc, b and Robert F. Whtelaw c* ABSTRACT Ths paper ntroduces a new, hybrd measure of covarance rsk n the

More information

Department of Economics Working Paper Series

Department of Economics Working Paper Series Department of Economcs Workng Paper Seres Exchange rate exposure: A nonparametrc approach Uluc Aysun Unversty of Connectcut Melane Guld Mount Holyoke College Workng Paper 2009-18 June 2009 341 Mansfeld

More information

CHAPTER 9 FUNCTIONAL FORMS OF REGRESSION MODELS

CHAPTER 9 FUNCTIONAL FORMS OF REGRESSION MODELS CHAPTER 9 FUNCTIONAL FORMS OF REGRESSION MODELS QUESTIONS 9.1. (a) In a log-log model the dependent and all explanatory varables are n the logarthmc form. (b) In the log-ln model the dependent varable

More information

Method of Payment and Target Status: Announcement Returns to Acquiring Firms in the Malaysian Market

Method of Payment and Target Status: Announcement Returns to Acquiring Firms in the Malaysian Market Method of Payment and Target Status: Announcement Returns to Acqurng Frms n the Malaysan Market Mansor Isa Faculty of Busness and Accountancy, Unversty of Malaya Lembah Panta, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysa

More information

Notes are not permitted in this examination. Do not turn over until you are told to do so by the Invigilator.

Notes are not permitted in this examination. Do not turn over until you are told to do so by the Invigilator. UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA School of Economcs Man Seres PG Examnaton 2016-17 BANKING ECONOMETRICS ECO-7014A Tme allowed: 2 HOURS Answer ALL FOUR questons. Queston 1 carres a weght of 30%; queston 2 carres

More information

Construction Rules for Morningstar Canada Dividend Target 30 Index TM

Construction Rules for Morningstar Canada Dividend Target 30 Index TM Constructon Rules for Mornngstar Canada Dvdend Target 0 Index TM Mornngstar Methodology Paper January 2012 2011 Mornngstar, Inc. All rghts reserved. The nformaton n ths document s the property of Mornngstar,

More information

Analysis of Moody s Bottom Rung Firms

Analysis of Moody s Bottom Rung Firms Analyss of Moody s Bottom Rung Frms Stoyu I. Ivanov * San Jose State Unversty Howard Turetsky San Jose State Unversty Abstract: Moody s publshed for the frst tme on March 10, 2009 a lst of Bottom Rung

More information

Asset Management. Country Allocation and Mutual Fund Returns

Asset Management. Country Allocation and Mutual Fund Returns Country Allocaton and Mutual Fund Returns By Dr. Lela Heckman, Senor Managng Drector and Dr. John Mulln, Managng Drector Bear Stearns Asset Management Bear Stearns Actve Country Equty Executve Summary

More information

Mutual Funds and Management Styles. Active Portfolio Management

Mutual Funds and Management Styles. Active Portfolio Management utual Funds and anagement Styles ctve Portfolo anagement ctve Portfolo anagement What s actve portfolo management? How can we measure the contrbuton of actve portfolo management? We start out wth the CP

More information

Teaching Note on Factor Model with a View --- A tutorial. This version: May 15, Prepared by Zhi Da *

Teaching Note on Factor Model with a View --- A tutorial. This version: May 15, Prepared by Zhi Da * Copyrght by Zh Da and Rav Jagannathan Teachng Note on For Model th a Ve --- A tutoral Ths verson: May 5, 2005 Prepared by Zh Da * Ths tutoral demonstrates ho to ncorporate economc ves n optmal asset allocaton

More information

GROWTH STRATEGIES AND CAPITAL STRUCTURES OF SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES *

GROWTH STRATEGIES AND CAPITAL STRUCTURES OF SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES * GROWTH STRATEGIES AND CAPITAL STRUCTURES OF SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES * Mnna Martkanen a Juss Nkknen b a Lappeenranta Unversty of Technology, Fnland b Unversty of Vaasa, Fnland February 5, 2007

More information

A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge

A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge Sganos, A. (2013) Google attenton and target prce run ups. Internatonal Revew of Fnancal Analyss. ISSN 1057-5219 Copyrght 2012 Elsever A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercal research or study,

More information

Investment Management Active Portfolio Management

Investment Management Active Portfolio Management Investment Management Actve Portfolo Management Road Map The Effcent Markets Hypothess (EMH) and beatng the market Actve portfolo management Market tmng Securty selecton Securty selecton: Treynor&Black

More information

Chapter 5 Bonds, Bond Prices and the Determination of Interest Rates

Chapter 5 Bonds, Bond Prices and the Determination of Interest Rates Chapter 5 Bonds, Bond Prces and the Determnaton of Interest Rates Problems and Solutons 1. Consder a U.S. Treasury Bll wth 270 days to maturty. If the annual yeld s 3.8 percent, what s the prce? $100 P

More information

Option Repricing and Incentive Realignment

Option Repricing and Incentive Realignment Opton Reprcng and Incentve Realgnment Jeffrey L. Coles Department of Fnance W. P. Carey School of Busness Arzona State Unversty Jeffrey.Coles@asu.edu Tel: (480) 965-4475 Naveen D. Danel Department of Fnance

More information

Exchange Rate Exposure Elasticity of Korean Companies: Pre- and Post-Economic Crisis Analysis

Exchange Rate Exposure Elasticity of Korean Companies: Pre- and Post-Economic Crisis Analysis Exchange Rate Exposure Elastcy of Korean Companes: Pre- and Post-Economc Crss Analyss Byung-Joo Lee Department of Economcs Unversy of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA Phone: 219-631-6837 Fax: 219-631-889

More information

Does a Threshold Inflation Rate Exist? Quantile Inferences for Inflation and Its Variability

Does a Threshold Inflation Rate Exist? Quantile Inferences for Inflation and Its Variability Does a Threshold Inflaton Rate Exst? Inferences for Inflaton and Its Varablty WenShwo Fang Department of Economcs Feng Cha Unversty Tachung, TAIWAN Stephen M. Mller* Department of Economcs Unversty of

More information

The Impact of Governance on IFRS Restatement Quality

The Impact of Governance on IFRS Restatement Quality The Impact of Governance on IFRS Restatement Qualty Authors: Arnt Verrest* Ann Gaeremynck Contact Informaton: *Contactng Author: Katholeke Unverstet Leuven Etenne Sabbelaan 53 B-8500 Kortrjk Arnt.verrest@kuleuven-kortrjk.be

More information

A MODEL OF COMPETITION AMONG TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICE PROVIDERS BASED ON REPEATED GAME

A MODEL OF COMPETITION AMONG TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICE PROVIDERS BASED ON REPEATED GAME A MODEL OF COMPETITION AMONG TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICE PROVIDERS BASED ON REPEATED GAME Vesna Radonć Đogatovć, Valentna Radočć Unversty of Belgrade Faculty of Transport and Traffc Engneerng Belgrade, Serba

More information

Construction Rules for Morningstar Canada Dividend Target 30 Index TM

Construction Rules for Morningstar Canada Dividend Target 30 Index TM Constructon Rules for Mornngstar Canada Dvdend Target 0 Index TM Mornngstar Methodology Paper January 2012 2011 Mornngstar, Inc. All rghts reserved. The nformaton n ths document s the property of Mornngstar,

More information

FORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY SUGGESTED ANSWERS. Richard M. Levich. New York University Stern School of Business. Revised, February 1999

FORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY SUGGESTED ANSWERS. Richard M. Levich. New York University Stern School of Business. Revised, February 1999 FORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY SUGGESTED ANSWERS by Rchard M. Levch New York Unversty Stern School of Busness Revsed, February 1999 1 SETTING UP THE PROBLEM The bond s beng sold to Swss nvestors for a prce

More information

Managing EPS Through Accelerated Share Repurchases: Compensation Versus Capital Market Incentives

Managing EPS Through Accelerated Share Repurchases: Compensation Versus Capital Market Incentives Managng EPS Through Accelerated Share Repurchases: Compensaton Versus Captal Market Incentves Carol Marquardt Assocate Professor Baruch College CUNY Chrstne Tan Assstant Professor Baruch College CUNY and

More information

Network Analytics in Finance

Network Analytics in Finance Network Analytcs n Fnance Prof. Dr. Danng Hu Department of Informatcs Unversty of Zurch Nov 14th, 2014 Outlne Introducton: Network Analytcs n Fnance Stock Correlaton Networks Stock Ownershp Networks Board

More information

ISE Cloud Computing Index Methodology

ISE Cloud Computing Index Methodology ISE Cloud Computng Index Methodology Index Descrpton The ISE Cloud Computng Index s desgned to track the performance of companes nvolved n the cloud computng ndustry. Index Calculaton The ISE Cloud Computng

More information

Welfare Aspects in the Realignment of Commercial Framework. between Japan and China

Welfare Aspects in the Realignment of Commercial Framework. between Japan and China Prepared for the 13 th INFORUM World Conference n Huangshan, Chna, July 3 9, 2005 Welfare Aspects n the Realgnment of Commercal Framework between Japan and Chna Toshak Hasegawa Chuo Unversty, Japan Introducton

More information

Module Contact: Dr P Moffatt, ECO Copyright of the University of East Anglia Version 2

Module Contact: Dr P Moffatt, ECO Copyright of the University of East Anglia Version 2 UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA School of Economcs Man Seres PG Examnaton 2012-13 FINANCIAL ECONOMETRICS ECO-M017 Tme allowed: 2 hours Answer ALL FOUR questons. Queston 1 carres a weght of 25%; Queston 2 carres

More information

Synergy Motivation and Target Ownership Structure: Effects on Takeover Performance

Synergy Motivation and Target Ownership Structure: Effects on Takeover Performance Synergy Motvaton and Target Ownershp Structure: Effects on Takeover Performance Han Donker, School of Busness, Unversty of orthern Brtsh Columba, Canada Alex g, School of Busness, Unversty of orthern Brtsh

More information

ASSET LIQUIDITY, STOCK LIQUIDITY, AND OWNERSHIP CONCENTRATION: EVIDENCE FROM THE ASE

ASSET LIQUIDITY, STOCK LIQUIDITY, AND OWNERSHIP CONCENTRATION: EVIDENCE FROM THE ASE ASSET LIQUIDITY, STOCK LIQUIDITY, AND OWNERSHIP CONCENTRATION: EVIDENCE FROM THE ASE Ghada Tayem*, Mohammad Tayeh**, Adel Bno** * Correspondng author: Department of Fnance, School of Busness, The Unversty

More information

Testing Benjamin Graham s Net Current Asset Value Strategy in London

Testing Benjamin Graham s Net Current Asset Value Strategy in London Testng Benjamn Graham s Net Current Asset Value Strategy n London Yng Xao and Glen Arnold Centre for Economcs and Fnance Research Salford Busness School Unversty of Salford Salford Manchester M5 4WT, UK

More information

cost of equity and long-term growth Alexander Nekrasov University of California, Irvine

cost of equity and long-term growth Alexander Nekrasov University of California, Irvine Usng earnngs forecasts to smultaneously estmate frm-specfc cost of equty and long-term growth by Alexander Nekrasov Unversty of Calforna, Irvne anekraso@uc.edu Mara Ogneva Stanford Unversty ogneva@stanford.edu

More information

Labor Market Transitions in Peru

Labor Market Transitions in Peru Labor Market Transtons n Peru Javer Herrera* Davd Rosas Shady** *IRD and INEI, E-mal: jherrera@ne.gob.pe ** IADB, E-mal: davdro@adb.org The Issue U s one of the major ssues n Peru However: - The U rate

More information

The Short and Long-Run Financial Impact of Corporate Outsourcing Transactions. Ning Gao. B.A. in Accounting, Ren Min University, 1998

The Short and Long-Run Financial Impact of Corporate Outsourcing Transactions. Ning Gao. B.A. in Accounting, Ren Min University, 1998 The Short and Long-Run Fnancal Impact of Corporate Outsourcng Transactons by Nng Gao B.A. n Accountng, Ren Mn Unversty, 1998 M.A. n Economcs, Florda State Unversty, 2001 Submtted to the Graduate Faculty

More information

Risk and Returns of Commercial Real Estate: A Property Level Analysis

Risk and Returns of Commercial Real Estate: A Property Level Analysis Rsk and Returns of Commercal Real Estate: A Property Level Analyss Lang Peng Leeds School of Busness Unversty of Colorado at Boulder 419 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0419 Emal: lang.peng@colorado.edu Phone:

More information

The Effects of Industrial Structure Change on Economic Growth in China Based on LMDI Decomposition Approach

The Effects of Industrial Structure Change on Economic Growth in China Based on LMDI Decomposition Approach 216 Internatonal Conference on Mathematcal, Computatonal and Statstcal Scences and Engneerng (MCSSE 216) ISBN: 978-1-6595-96- he Effects of Industral Structure Change on Economc Growth n Chna Based on

More information

Essays on the Dynamics of Capital Structure

Essays on the Dynamics of Capital Structure Unversty of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO Unversty of New Orleans Theses and Dssertatons Dssertatons and Theses 8-7-2003 Essays on the Dynamcs of Captal Structure Joseph Farhat Unversty of New Orleans Follow

More information

Kent Academic Repository

Kent Academic Repository Kent Academc Repostory Full text document (pdf) Ctaton for publshed verson Economou, Fotn and Katskas, Epamenondas and Vckers, Gregory (2016) Testng for herdng n the Athens Stock Exchange durng the crss

More information

occurrence of a larger storm than our culvert or bridge is barely capable of handling? (what is The main question is: What is the possibility of

occurrence of a larger storm than our culvert or bridge is barely capable of handling? (what is The main question is: What is the possibility of Module 8: Probablty and Statstcal Methods n Water Resources Engneerng Bob Ptt Unversty of Alabama Tuscaloosa, AL Flow data are avalable from numerous USGS operated flow recordng statons. Data s usually

More information

Conditional Beta Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and Duration Dependence Tests

Conditional Beta Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and Duration Dependence Tests Condtonal Beta Captal Asset Prcng Model (CAPM) and Duraton Dependence Tests By Davd E. Allen 1 and Imbarne Bujang 1 1 School of Accountng, Fnance and Economcs, Edth Cowan Unversty School of Accountng,

More information

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AVERAGE ASSET CORRELATION AND DEFAULT PROBABILITY

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AVERAGE ASSET CORRELATION AND DEFAULT PROBABILITY JULY 22, 2009 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AVERAGE ASSET CORRELATION AND DEFAULT PROBABILITY AUTHORS Joseph Lee Joy Wang Jng Zhang ABSTRACT Asset correlaton and default probablty are crtcal drvers n modelng

More information

Jenee Stephens, Dave Seerattan, DeLisle Worrell Caribbean Center for Money and Finance 41 st Annual Monetary Studies Conference November 10 13, 2009

Jenee Stephens, Dave Seerattan, DeLisle Worrell Caribbean Center for Money and Finance 41 st Annual Monetary Studies Conference November 10 13, 2009 Jenee Stephens, ave Seerattan, esle Worrell Carbbean Center for Money and nance 41 st Annual Monetary Studes Conference November 10 13, 2009 1 OUTINE! Introducton! Revew of lterature! The Model! Prelmnary

More information

International Financial Management

International Financial Management Multnatonal Corporatons (MNC Internatonal nancal Management nance ummer 006 xed versus loatng Exchange Rates loatng xed Managed floatng rate Currences float freely n ths, and s (prces are set by supply

More information

Prospect Theory and Asset Prices

Prospect Theory and Asset Prices Fnance 400 A. Penat - G. Pennacch Prospect Theory and Asset Prces These notes consder the asset prcng mplcatons of nvestor behavor that ncorporates Prospect Theory. It summarzes an artcle by N. Barbers,

More information

Economic Design of Short-Run CSP-1 Plan Under Linear Inspection Cost

Economic Design of Short-Run CSP-1 Plan Under Linear Inspection Cost Tamkang Journal of Scence and Engneerng, Vol. 9, No 1, pp. 19 23 (2006) 19 Economc Desgn of Short-Run CSP-1 Plan Under Lnear Inspecton Cost Chung-Ho Chen 1 * and Chao-Yu Chou 2 1 Department of Industral

More information

Managing EPS Through Accelerated Share Repurchases: Compensation Versus Capital Market Incentives

Managing EPS Through Accelerated Share Repurchases: Compensation Versus Capital Market Incentives Managng EPS Through Accelerated Share Repurchases: Compensaton Versus Captal Market Incentves Carol Marquardt Assocate Professor Baruch College CUNY Chrstne Tan Assstant Professor Baruch College CUNY and

More information

Portfolio Strategies for hedging against Rand weakness

Portfolio Strategies for hedging against Rand weakness Portfolo Strateges for hedgng aganst Rand weakness GDI Barr, C Holdsworth and BS Kantor* Unversty of Cape Town November 2006 * respectvely, Professor n the department of Statstcal Scences, graduate researcher

More information

Firm fundamentals, short selling, and stock returns. Abstract

Firm fundamentals, short selling, and stock returns. Abstract Frm fundamentals, short sellng, and stock returns Yulang Wu a and Khelfa Mazouz b* Abstract Ths study uses short sellng actvty to test whether the relaton between fundamentals and future returns s due

More information

Limits of arbitrage and corporate financial policy

Limits of arbitrage and corporate financial policy Lmts of arbtrage and corporate fnancal polcy Massmo Massa INSEAD * Urs Peyer INSEAD * Zhenxu Tong INSEAD * Frst draft: March 2004 Ths draft: September 2004 Abstract We focus on an exogenous event that

More information

Finance 402: Problem Set 1 Solutions

Finance 402: Problem Set 1 Solutions Fnance 402: Problem Set 1 Solutons Note: Where approprate, the fnal answer for each problem s gven n bold talcs for those not nterested n the dscusson of the soluton. 1. The annual coupon rate s 6%. A

More information

Spurious Seasonal Patterns and Excess Smoothness in the BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics

Spurious Seasonal Patterns and Excess Smoothness in the BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics Spurous Seasonal Patterns and Excess Smoothness n the BLS Local Area Unemployment Statstcs Keth R. Phllps and Janguo Wang Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Research Department Workng Paper 1305 September

More information

An Application of Alternative Weighting Matrix Collapsing Approaches for Improving Sample Estimates

An Application of Alternative Weighting Matrix Collapsing Approaches for Improving Sample Estimates Secton on Survey Research Methods An Applcaton of Alternatve Weghtng Matrx Collapsng Approaches for Improvng Sample Estmates Lnda Tompkns 1, Jay J. Km 2 1 Centers for Dsease Control and Preventon, atonal

More information

Corporate Governance and Equity Liquidity: An Analysis of S&P Transparency and Disclosure Ranking

Corporate Governance and Equity Liquidity: An Analysis of S&P Transparency and Disclosure Ranking Corporate Governance and Equty Lqudty: An Analyss of S&P Transparency and Dsclosure Rankng We-Peng Chen Humn Chung Cheng-few Lee We-L Lao ABSTRACT Ths paper nvestgates the effects of dsclosure and other

More information

University of Toronto November 9, 2006 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 L0101 L0201 L0401 L5101 MW MW 1-2 MW 2-3 W 6-8

University of Toronto November 9, 2006 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 L0101 L0201 L0401 L5101 MW MW 1-2 MW 2-3 W 6-8 Department of Economcs Prof. Gustavo Indart Unversty of Toronto November 9, 2006 SOLUTION ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #1 A LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER Crcle your secton of the course:

More information

University of Toronto November 9, 2006 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 L0101 L0201 L0401 L5101 MW MW 1-2 MW 2-3 W 6-8

University of Toronto November 9, 2006 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 L0101 L0201 L0401 L5101 MW MW 1-2 MW 2-3 W 6-8 Department of Economcs Prof. Gustavo Indart Unversty of Toronto November 9, 2006 SOLUTION ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #1 C LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER Crcle your secton of the course:

More information

Chapter 5 Risk and return

Chapter 5 Risk and return Chapter 5 Rsk and return Instructor s resources Overvew Ths chapter focuses on the fundamentals of the rsk and return relatonshp of assets and ther valuaton. For the sngle asset held n solaton, rsk s measured

More information

Price and Quantity Competition Revisited. Abstract

Price and Quantity Competition Revisited. Abstract rce and uantty Competton Revsted X. Henry Wang Unversty of Mssour - Columba Abstract By enlargng the parameter space orgnally consdered by Sngh and Vves (984 to allow for a wder range of cost asymmetry,

More information

Work, Offers, and Take-Up: Decomposing the Source of Recent Declines in Employer- Sponsored Insurance

Work, Offers, and Take-Up: Decomposing the Source of Recent Declines in Employer- Sponsored Insurance Work, Offers, and Take-Up: Decomposng the Source of Recent Declnes n Employer- Sponsored Insurance Lnda J. Blumberg and John Holahan The Natonal Bureau of Economc Research (NBER) determned that a recesson

More information

Informational Content of Option Trading on Acquirer Announcement Return * National Chengchi University. The University of Hong Kong.

Informational Content of Option Trading on Acquirer Announcement Return * National Chengchi University. The University of Hong Kong. Informatonal Content of Opton Tradng on Acqurer Announcement Return * Konan Chan a, b,, L Ge b,, and Tse-Chun Ln b, a Natonal Chengch Unversty b The Unversty of Hong Kong May, 2012 Abstract Ths paper examnes

More information

Economies of Scale in the Banking Industry: The Effects of Loan Specialization

Economies of Scale in the Banking Industry: The Effects of Loan Specialization Economes of Scale n the Bankng Industry: The Effects of Loan Specalzaton Y-Ka Chen Department of Busness Admnstraton and Educaton School of Busness Empora State Unversty Empora, KS 66801 E-mal: chenyka@empora.edu

More information

Introduction. Chapter 7 - An Introduction to Portfolio Management

Introduction. Chapter 7 - An Introduction to Portfolio Management Introducton In the next three chapters, we wll examne dfferent aspects of captal market theory, ncludng: Brngng rsk and return nto the pcture of nvestment management Markowtz optmzaton Modelng rsk and

More information

UNDERPRICING AND EX ANTE UNCERTAINTY IN IPOS: EVIDENCE FROM THE TUNISIAN STOCK MARKET

UNDERPRICING AND EX ANTE UNCERTAINTY IN IPOS: EVIDENCE FROM THE TUNISIAN STOCK MARKET Busness Excellence and Management Jerb, A. UNDERPRICING AND EX ANTE UNCERTAINTY IN IPOS: EVIDENCE FROM THE TUNISIAN STOCK MARKET Ahmed JERIBI Unversty of Sfax, Sfax, Tunsa ahmedjerb07@yahoo.fr Abstract

More information

Department of Economics Working Paper Series

Department of Economics Working Paper Series Department of Economcs Workng Paper Seres Increasng Dervatves Market Actvty n Emergng Markets and Exchange Rate Exposure Uluc Aysun Unversty of Connectcut Melane Guld Mount Holyoke College Workng Paper

More information

Principles of Finance

Principles of Finance Prncples of Fnance Grzegorz Trojanowsk Lecture 6: Captal Asset Prcng Model Prncples of Fnance - Lecture 6 1 Lecture 6 materal Requred readng: Elton et al., Chapters 13, 14, and 15 Supplementary readng:

More information

Monetary Tightening Cycles and the Predictability of Economic Activity. by Tobias Adrian and Arturo Estrella * October 2006.

Monetary Tightening Cycles and the Predictability of Economic Activity. by Tobias Adrian and Arturo Estrella * October 2006. Monetary Tghtenng Cycles and the Predctablty of Economc Actvty by Tobas Adran and Arturo Estrella * October 2006 Abstract Ten out of thrteen monetary tghtenng cycles snce 1955 were followed by ncreases

More information

4. Greek Letters, Value-at-Risk

4. Greek Letters, Value-at-Risk 4 Greek Letters, Value-at-Rsk 4 Value-at-Rsk (Hull s, Chapter 8) Math443 W08, HM Zhu Outlne (Hull, Chap 8) What s Value at Rsk (VaR)? Hstorcal smulatons Monte Carlo smulatons Model based approach Varance-covarance

More information

Suggested running head: Determinants of COE of M sian Firms

Suggested running head: Determinants of COE of M sian Firms CS3-H2 The 12th Internatonal Conventon of the East Asan Economc Assocaton LG Conventon Hall, Internatonal Educaton Buldng, Ewha Womans Unversty, Seoul, 2-3 October 2010 Conventon Theme: Asa and the Global

More information

Networks in Finance and Marketing I

Networks in Finance and Marketing I Networks n Fnance and Marketng I Prof. Dr. Danng Hu Department of Informatcs Unversty of Zurch Nov 26th, 2012 Outlne n Introducton: Networks n Fnance n Stock Correlaton Networks n Stock Ownershp Networks

More information

Quiz on Deterministic part of course October 22, 2002

Quiz on Deterministic part of course October 22, 2002 Engneerng ystems Analyss for Desgn Quz on Determnstc part of course October 22, 2002 Ths s a closed book exercse. You may use calculators Grade Tables There are 90 ponts possble for the regular test, or

More information

Forecasts in Times of Crises

Forecasts in Times of Crises Forecasts n Tmes of Crses Aprl 2017 Chars Chrstofdes IMF Davd J. Kuenzel Wesleyan Unversty Theo S. Echer Unversty of Washngton Chrs Papageorgou IMF 1 Macroeconomc forecasts suffer from three sources of

More information

J. Basic. Appl. Sci. Res., 2(10) , , TextRoad Publication

J. Basic. Appl. Sci. Res., 2(10) , , TextRoad Publication 202, TextRoad Publcaton ISSN 2090-4304 Journal of Basc and Appled Scentfc Research www.textroad.com Comparng the Effect of Proft Increase Crtera wth the Cash Recovery Rate of Companes Lsted on Tehran Stock

More information

Stochastic ALM models - General Methodology

Stochastic ALM models - General Methodology Stochastc ALM models - General Methodology Stochastc ALM models are generally mplemented wthn separate modules: A stochastc scenaros generator (ESG) A cash-flow projecton tool (or ALM projecton) For projectng

More information

NYSE Specialists Participation in the Posted Quotes

NYSE Specialists Participation in the Posted Quotes European Journal of Economc and Poltcal Studes NYSE Specalsts Partcpaton n the Posted Quotes Bülent Köksal 1 Abstract: Usng 2001 NYSE system order data n the decmal prcng envronment, we analyze how the

More information