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Die Regulierung außerbörslicher Wertpapierhandelssysteme im deutschen, europäischen und US-amerikanischen Recht
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ISBN: 3110925400 3899493214 Year: 2006 Publisher: De Gruyter

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Der technologische Fortschritt und die wachsende Bedeutung institutioneller Investoren im Rahmen der ökonomischen Globalisierung haben zu der Entstehung von außerbörslichen Wertpapierhandelssystemen, so genannten Alternative Trading Systems, beigetragen. Diese sind in den USA bereits zur stärksten Konkurrenz der traditionellen Börsen aufgestiegen. Aber auch in Europa konfrontiert das Auftauchen solcher Systeme die traditionellen Börsen mit neuen Wettbewerbern und erzwingt neue Regelungen durch den Gesetzgeber. Die 2004 erlassene europäische Richtlinie über Märkte für Finanzinstrumente (MiFID) enthält für außerbörsliche Wertpapierhandelssysteme ein detailliertes und ausdifferenziertes Regulierungsregime. Aufgrund der MiFID besteht ein erheblicher Anpassungsbedarf im deutschen Recht, zumal eine Umsetzung dieser Richtlinie bis 2006 vorgeschrieben ist.In der Monographie wird der Frage nachgegangen, wohin die rechtliche Entwicklung im Kapitalmarktrecht führen wird, wie sich die Vorgaben der MiFID in das deutsche Recht umsetzen lassen und wie eine optimale Gestaltung der Regulierung alternativer Handelssysteme aussehen könnte. Im Rechtsvergleich mit den US-amerikanischen Bestimmungen werden dafür die Vorschriften der MiFID sowie des Börsengesetzes mit der Zielsetzung analysiert, Vorschläge für eine praktikable Umsetzung der Richtlinie in deutsches Recht sowie darüber hinausgehend für die Schaffung effektiver börsenrechtlicher Regelungen für außerbörsliche Wertpapierhandelssysteme zu machen. Dabei geht es auch darum zu ermitteln, welche zwingenden Vorgaben die Richtlinie enthält, und welche Freiräume sie andererseits für eine nationale Gestaltung belässt. This monograph addresses the questions of where the legal trend in the law of capital markets will lead, how the specifications of the MiFID can be implemented in German law, and how an optimal arrangement of the regulation for alternative trading systems could appear. In comparing the law with the US American provisions, the requirements of the MiFID as well as the exchange statute are analysed with the goal of making recommendations for a practicable implementation of the guidelines in German law and for the creation of effective exchange law regulations for over-the-counter securities trading systems as well. At the same time, the point is also to determine which mandatory requirements the policy includes, and what room it leaves for a national configuration on the other hand.


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Financial Globalization : A Glass Half Empty?
Authors: ---
Year: 2017 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Since the 1970s, the world has embarked on a new financial globalization era. Cross-country capital flows have significantly increased in developed and developing countries. However, the characteristics of financial globalization differ from what was originally expected. Various examples illustrate this point. Although the literature predicted large gains from financial globalization (such as additional funding, broad diversification, and deeper financial systems), the positive effects have been more limited. In developed and developing countries, financial globalization has manifested in increasing gross capital flows (inflows and outflows) rather than larger net flows. Capital markets are segmented and only a few large firms access international markets. International institutional investors do not seem to have played a stabilizing role, helping to exacerbate and transmit crises across countries. Although financial globalization has brought several beneficial changes, its net effects and spillovers to the overall economies participating in it have yet to be understood.


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Long-Run Returns to Impact Investing in Emerging Market and Developing Economies
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2020 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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There is growing interest in impact investing, the idea of deploying capital to obtain both financial and social or environmental returns. Examination of every equity investment made by one of the largest and longest-operating impact investors across 130 emerging market and developing economies shows this portfolio has outperformed the S and P 500 by 15 percent. Investments in larger economies have higher returns, and returns decline as banking systems deepen and countries relax capital controls. These results are consistent with imperfect integration of international capital markets and the thesis of impact investing that some eligible markets do not receive sufficient investment capital.


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Development Finance Via Diaspora Bonds Track Record and Potential
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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A diaspora bond is a debt instrument issued by a country - or potentially, a sub-sovereign entity or a private corporation - to raise financing from its overseas diaspora. Israel and India have raised USD 35-40 billion using these bonds. Drawing on their experiences, this paper discusses the rationale, methodology, and factors affecting the issuance of diaspora bonds for raising external development finance. The Government of Israel has offered a flexible menu of diaspora bonds since 1951 to keep the Jewish diaspora engaged. The Indian authorities, in contrast, have used this instrument for balance of payments support, to raise financing during times when they had difficulty in accessing international capital markets. Diaspora bonds are often sold at a premium to the diaspora members, thus fetching a "patriotic" discount in borrowing costs. Besides patriotism or the desire to do good in the investor's country of origin, such a discount can also be explained by the fact that diaspora investors may be more willing and able to take on sovereign risks of default in hard currency as well as devaluation as they may have local currency liabilities and they may be able to influence the borrower's decision to service such debt. The paper discusses several conditions for successful diaspora bond issuance having a sizeable diaspora, especially first-generation migrants, is understandably an important factor affecting the issuance of diaspora bonds. Countries with strong and transparent legal systems for contract enforcement are likely to find it easier to issue such bonds. Absence of civil strife is a plus. While not a pre-requisite, presence of national banks and other institutions in destination countries facilitates the marketing of bonds to the diaspora.


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Cointegration of International Stock Market Indices
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 1462336833 1452768412 Year: 1994 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund,

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In this paper, we derive evidence on the integration of international stock markets from the cointegration properties of international stock market prices. Using the multivariate cointegration test of Johansen, we find that the set of six country stock price indices, including that of the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Japan are cointegrated. The results suggest that there are long-run equilibrium relationships among the stock market prices. Subsample and subgroup analyses also indicate that the cointegration relationships have become stronger over time. This is consistent with greater stock market integration amid the increasing liberalization and globalization of capital markets.


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Bilateral International Investments : The Big Sur?
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2020 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Using country-to-country data, this paper documents a set of novel stylized facts about the rise of the South in global finance. The paper assembles comprehensive bilateral data on cross-border bank loans and deposits, portfolio investment in debt and equity, foreign direct investment, and international reserves. The main finding is that global financial integration with and especially within the South (countries outside the G7 and Western Europe) has grown faster than within the North. By 2018, the South accounted for 24 to 40 percent of international loans and deposits, portfolio investment, and foreign direct investment, an increase of roughly 10 percentage points since 2001. The growing importance of the South is reflected in the intensive and extensive margins, with fast growth in the number of bilateral links. Although China weighs heavily in these trends, international investment in the rest of the South has increased to a similar extent.


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Demystifying Dutch Disease
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Year: 2014 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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This paper examines the theory of Dutch disease and its implications for practical policy questions. Dutch disease is a term that is well-known to economists and development practitioners. But it is also a concept that is often conflated with "resource curse" and misinterpreted as a "disease" that necessarily causes adverse impacts on the economy. The paper points out that many of the seemingly well-established arguments in this field are not necessarily grounded in theory or empirical evidence. Great care is needed in diagnosing Dutch disease and formulating policy prescriptions based on the theoretical framework, given the restrictive assumptions that may not be fully applicable and the limited relevance to today's inextricably intertwined trade flows. Countries facing large inflows of foreign currency should focus on safeguarding the domestic economy from the volatility of international commodity and capital markets, and building robust institutions to reduce adjustment costs and boost broader competitiveness. A policy package needs to be comprehensive, covering macroeconomic and structural policy measures, and should be calibrated to target country specific concerns. Policies may need to be adjusted continuously in view of the evolving dynamics of the global and domestic economic environment.


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Decrypting New Age International Capital Flows
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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This paper employs high frequency transactions data on the world's oldest and most extensive centralized peer-to-peer Bitcoin market, which enables trade in the currencies of more than 135 countries. It presents an algorithm that allows, with high probability, the detection of "crypto vehicle transactions" in which crypto currency is used to move capital across borders or facilitate domestic transactions. In contrast to previous work which has used "on-chain" data, this paper's approach enables one to investigate parts of the vastly larger pool of "off-chain" transactions. Finding that, as a conservative lower bound, over 7 percent of the 45 million trades on the exchange we explore represent crypto vehicle transactions in which Bitcoin is used to make payments in fiat currency. Roughly 20 percent of these represent international capital flight/flows/remittances. Although this work cannot be used to put a price on cryptocurrencies, it provides the first systematic quantitative evidence that the transactional use of cryptocurrencies constitutes a fundamental component of their value, at least under the current regulatory regime.


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Applied international finance : managing foreign exchange risk and international capital budgeting
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ISBN: 1606497359 Year: 2014 Publisher: New York, New York (222 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017) : Business Expert Press,

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This text is designed for use in a course in applied international corporate finance for managers and executives. Instead of the "encyclopedic" approach, the text focuses on the two main issues of interest to managers who deal with overseas operations. The first main issue is how uncertain foreign exchange (FX) rate changes affect a firm's ongoing cash flows and equity value, and what can be done about this risk. The second main issue is the estimation of the cost of capital for international operations and the evaluation of overseas investment proposals. Numerous examples of real-world companies are used.


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Does Financial Openness Lead To Deeper Domestic Financial Markets?
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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Advanced and emerging market economies have rapidly integrated into international capital markets and this growing globalization of financial markets has led to some important changes in the patterns of saving and investment across the world. The main goal of this paper is to test whether the cross-border asset trade has led to improvements in the intermediation of these savings - that is, foster development of domestic financial markets. The authors have collected annual information on financial market development, financial openness, and other control variables for a sample of 145 countries for the period 1974-2007. Controlling for the likely endogeneity of financial openness, the analysis finds that rising financial openness expands private credit, bank assets, and stock market and private bond market development, and generates efficiency gains in the banking system. However, the impact of financial openness on domestic financial development may depend on the level of institutional quality, the extent of investor protection, and the degree of trade openness. In general, rising financial openness will enlarge the size and activity of financial intermediaries, improve efficiency in the banking system, and contribute to deepen private bond markets in countries with moderate to high levels of institutional quality and investor protection as well as in countries with high trade openness.

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