Wellcome

Advances in financial economics. Vol. 15 [electronic resource] / edited by Stephen P. Ferris, Kose John, Anil K. Makhija.

Contributor(s): Ferris, Stephen P | John, Kose | Makhija, Anil KMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Advances in financial economicsPublication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2012Description: 1 online resource (viii, 238 p.) : illISBN: 9781780527895 (electronic bk.) :Subject(s): Business & Economics -- Economics -- Comparative | Business & Economics -- Finance | International finance | Financial crises & disasters | Corporate governance | Corporations -- FinanceAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 658.4 LOC classification: HD2741 | .A38 2012Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
SPAC performance, ownership and corporate governance / John S. Howe and Scott W. O'Brien -- Limits on convergence in international corporate governance practices / David Javakhadze, Stephen P. Ferris, Gregory Noronha -- Firm-specific factors affecting the private benefits of control in concentrated ownership economies / Ronen Barak, Beni Lauterbach -- The joint discipline of option and debt : theory and evidence from CEO's equity holding, capital structure, and executive compensation / Gang 'Nathan' Dong -- The effects of R&D expenditures on bondholders / Zhan Jiang, Kenneth A. Kim, Carl Hsin-Han Shen -- Short- and long-term share price reaction to announcements of financial restatements / Vijay Gondhalekar, Mahendra Joshi, Marie McKendall -- Government ownership, competition, and the risk-taking attitude of the GCC banking system / Ritab Al-Khouri -- CEO compensation, expropriation, and the balance of power among large shareholders / Yongli Luo, Dave O. Jackson.
Summary: This volume contains eight empirical papers that examine corporate governance from a number of different perspectives. Howe et al investigate how governance can influence short- and long-term performance in the case of Special Purpose Acquisition Companies; Javakhadze et al analyze limits to convergence in international corporate governance practices; Barak and Lauterbach focus on the private benefits of control; and Dong examines the relation between the discipline of options and corporate debt and the design of executive compensation. Jiang et al measure the effect of R&D expenditures on bondholders; Gondhalekar et al examine the capital market response to financial restatements; Al-Khouri reports robust evidence that privately owned banks are more risky than government-owned banks; and Luo and Jackson conclude that the positive relationship between tunneling and executive compensation implies personal benefits for controlling shareholders at the expense of minority shareholders.
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SPAC performance, ownership and corporate governance / John S. Howe and Scott W. O'Brien -- Limits on convergence in international corporate governance practices / David Javakhadze, Stephen P. Ferris, Gregory Noronha -- Firm-specific factors affecting the private benefits of control in concentrated ownership economies / Ronen Barak, Beni Lauterbach -- The joint discipline of option and debt : theory and evidence from CEO's equity holding, capital structure, and executive compensation / Gang 'Nathan' Dong -- The effects of R&D expenditures on bondholders / Zhan Jiang, Kenneth A. Kim, Carl Hsin-Han Shen -- Short- and long-term share price reaction to announcements of financial restatements / Vijay Gondhalekar, Mahendra Joshi, Marie McKendall -- Government ownership, competition, and the risk-taking attitude of the GCC banking system / Ritab Al-Khouri -- CEO compensation, expropriation, and the balance of power among large shareholders / Yongli Luo, Dave O. Jackson.

This volume contains eight empirical papers that examine corporate governance from a number of different perspectives. Howe et al investigate how governance can influence short- and long-term performance in the case of Special Purpose Acquisition Companies; Javakhadze et al analyze limits to convergence in international corporate governance practices; Barak and Lauterbach focus on the private benefits of control; and Dong examines the relation between the discipline of options and corporate debt and the design of executive compensation. Jiang et al measure the effect of R&D expenditures on bondholders; Gondhalekar et al examine the capital market response to financial restatements; Al-Khouri reports robust evidence that privately owned banks are more risky than government-owned banks; and Luo and Jackson conclude that the positive relationship between tunneling and executive compensation implies personal benefits for controlling shareholders at the expense of minority shareholders.

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