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Dissertation
Dynamic programming with discrete choice : households'attractiveness towards financial investments based on SHARE database
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2018 Publisher: Liège Université de Liège (ULiège)

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Abstract

This master thesis covers the evolution of households’ attractiveness towards risky investment over five time periods. The aim is to perform an empirical study on households’ investment decision by using the second proposition of Chou (2016) on dynamic programming with discrete choices. We defined the investment decision from households’ net total income and households’ health condition. Estimations are categorized regarding some exclusion restrictions depending on the level of education and the gender. 
The gross sample used is a longitudinal sample coming from the Survey on Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, most commonly known as SHARE. Our final sample gathers 3,551 individuals from nine different countries which in the first period of observations, which is 2004, are aged between 50 and 65 years old. We follow the evolution of their decision until 2014. From the final sample, two important points influenced the direction of our investigation. The first one is the age range used. It represents individuals that are coming closer the retirement age or just reach that life transition. Therefore, their financial goals are different from others age range and optimal decision toward their saving allocation is required. The second is the period studied. It includes the global financial crisis. Henceforth, different behaviours are expected with respect to the period before and after the crisis.
From the literature review, two main results appear. Income from public pension is not sufficient to maintain individuals’ living standards and cover their potential need for long-term care assistance when ageing. The ageing process combined with the global financial crisis have entails important shortfalls in pension funding. This underfunded problem is also the responsibility of institutional sponsors that suffers from various distortions and individuals’ intrinsic characteristics. It is therefore up to households get more involved and become actor in the preparation of their pension by boosting their retirement savings. 
From households’ budgeting rules, an optimal behaviour was determined. 20% of income has to be allocated to savings (Trulia, 2016). In addition, for age categories above 40 years old, savings should in priority be invested for retirement. Our investment decision has therefore been defined with respect to that optimal behaviour. 
Our estimations enable us to observe differences in intertemporal utility expressed in terms of differences in current utility and differences in continuation for the four exclusion restrictions defined at the beginning. The poor results in differences in continuation values suggest that households’ risk aversion is important - individuals’ express negative expectations toward a future positive benefit – and that only a minority of households adopt the optimal behaviour. 
Some explanations for households’ risk aversion can be founded in incentive effects and the uncertainty resulting of the global financial crisis. However, complementary investigations are necessary to obtain the full picture regarding investors risk preferences. We already covers individuals’ lack of discernment and imperfect foresight as bias interfering in their decision but we recommend to perform to study with wealth as an indicator of investment intensity and measure the risk aversion for different investment strategies.


Book
The econometric analysis of recurrent events in macroeconomics and finance
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9781400880935 1400880939 9780691167084 0691167087 Year: 2016 Publisher: Princeton

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The global financial crisis highlighted the impact on macroeconomic outcomes of recurrent events like business and financial cycles, highs and lows in volatility, and crashes and recessions. At the most basic level, such recurrent events can be summarized using binary indicators showing if the event will occur or not. These indicators are constructed either directly from data or indirectly through models. Because they are constructed, they have different properties than those arising in microeconometrics, and how one is to use them depends a lot on the method of construction.This book presents the econometric methods necessary for the successful modeling of recurrent events, providing valuable insights for policymakers, empirical researchers, and theorists. It explains why it is inherently difficult to forecast the onset of a recession in a way that provides useful guidance for active stabilization policy, with the consequence that policymakers should place more emphasis on making the economy robust to recessions. The book offers a range of econometric tools and techniques that researchers can use to measure recurrent events, summarize their properties, and evaluate how effectively economic and statistical models capture them. These methods also offer insights for developing models that are consistent with observed financial and real cycles.This book is an essential resource for students, academics, and researchers at central banks and institutions such as the International Monetary Fund.


Book
Corporate Finance
Author:
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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This book comprises 19 papers published in the Special Issue entitled “Corporate Finance”, focused on capital structure (Kedzior et al., 2020; Ntoung et al., 2020; Vintilă et al., 2019), dividend policy (Dragotă and Delcea, 2019; Pinto and Rastogi, 2019) and open-market share repurchase announcements (Ding et al., 2020), risk management (Chen et al., 2020; Nguyen Thanh, 2019; Štefko et al., 2020), financial reporting (Fossung et al., 2020), corporate brand and innovation (Barros et al., 2020; Błach et al., 2020), and corporate governance (Aluchna and Kuszewski, 2020; Dragotă et al.,2020; Gruszczyński, 2020; Kjærland et al., 2020; Koji et al., 2020; Lukason and Camacho-Miñano, 2020; Rashid Khan et al., 2020). It covers a broad range of companies worldwide (Cameroon, China, Estonia, India, Japan, Norway, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, United States, Vietnam), as well as various industries (heat supply, high-tech, manufacturing).

Keywords

Economics, finance, business & management --- cash holding ratio --- firm's efficiency --- threshold regression model --- non-financial companies --- Vietnam stock exchange market --- dividend policy --- emerging market --- industrial sectors --- NSE India --- panel data --- financial structure --- regression analysis --- agent-based models --- decision-making --- systematically making bad decisions --- investors' behavior --- simulation --- capital structure --- family firms --- leverage --- non-family firms --- risk --- pension incentive --- currency hedging --- multinational companies --- firm value --- CEO turnover --- foreign CEO --- female CEO --- ownership structure --- Romania --- brand interrelationships --- corporate identity --- brand reputation --- higher education --- students' perceptions --- corporate governance --- ownership concentration --- agency cost --- firm performance --- dynamic panel model --- perception --- OHADA accounting --- transition --- IFRS --- comparability --- open market share repurchase --- hubris --- cumulative announcement returns --- endowed --- SMEs financing --- financing gap --- innovative activity --- innovation --- capital structure decisions --- bankruptcy --- data envelopment analysis --- logit --- model --- family firm --- non-family firm --- corporate performance --- Japan --- board of directors --- women in corporations --- financial microeconometrics --- multiple regression --- quantile regression --- diff-in-diff --- New Technology-Based Firms (NTBFs) --- internal and external innovativeness --- intangibility --- information disclosure --- timeliness of financial reporting --- law violation --- private firms --- corporate governance best practice --- corporate governance compliance --- company value --- Warsaw Stock Exchange --- accrual earnings management --- Nordic model --- cash holding ratio --- firm's efficiency --- threshold regression model --- non-financial companies --- Vietnam stock exchange market --- dividend policy --- emerging market --- industrial sectors --- NSE India --- panel data --- financial structure --- regression analysis --- agent-based models --- decision-making --- systematically making bad decisions --- investors' behavior --- simulation --- capital structure --- family firms --- leverage --- non-family firms --- risk --- pension incentive --- currency hedging --- multinational companies --- firm value --- CEO turnover --- foreign CEO --- female CEO --- ownership structure --- Romania --- brand interrelationships --- corporate identity --- brand reputation --- higher education --- students' perceptions --- corporate governance --- ownership concentration --- agency cost --- firm performance --- dynamic panel model --- perception --- OHADA accounting --- transition --- IFRS --- comparability --- open market share repurchase --- hubris --- cumulative announcement returns --- endowed --- SMEs financing --- financing gap --- innovative activity --- innovation --- capital structure decisions --- bankruptcy --- data envelopment analysis --- logit --- model --- family firm --- non-family firm --- corporate performance --- Japan --- board of directors --- women in corporations --- financial microeconometrics --- multiple regression --- quantile regression --- diff-in-diff --- New Technology-Based Firms (NTBFs) --- internal and external innovativeness --- intangibility --- information disclosure --- timeliness of financial reporting --- law violation --- private firms --- corporate governance best practice --- corporate governance compliance --- company value --- Warsaw Stock Exchange --- accrual earnings management --- Nordic model


Book
Corporate Finance
Author:
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This book comprises 19 papers published in the Special Issue entitled “Corporate Finance”, focused on capital structure (Kedzior et al., 2020; Ntoung et al., 2020; Vintilă et al., 2019), dividend policy (Dragotă and Delcea, 2019; Pinto and Rastogi, 2019) and open-market share repurchase announcements (Ding et al., 2020), risk management (Chen et al., 2020; Nguyen Thanh, 2019; Štefko et al., 2020), financial reporting (Fossung et al., 2020), corporate brand and innovation (Barros et al., 2020; Błach et al., 2020), and corporate governance (Aluchna and Kuszewski, 2020; Dragotă et al.,2020; Gruszczyński, 2020; Kjærland et al., 2020; Koji et al., 2020; Lukason and Camacho-Miñano, 2020; Rashid Khan et al., 2020). It covers a broad range of companies worldwide (Cameroon, China, Estonia, India, Japan, Norway, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, United States, Vietnam), as well as various industries (heat supply, high-tech, manufacturing).

Keywords

cash holding ratio --- firm’s efficiency --- threshold regression model --- non-financial companies --- Vietnam stock exchange market --- dividend policy --- emerging market --- industrial sectors --- NSE India --- panel data --- financial structure --- regression analysis --- agent-based models --- decision-making --- systematically making bad decisions --- investors’ behavior --- simulation --- capital structure --- family firms --- leverage --- non-family firms --- risk --- pension incentive --- currency hedging --- multinational companies --- firm value --- CEO turnover --- foreign CEO --- female CEO --- ownership structure --- Romania --- brand interrelationships --- corporate identity --- brand reputation --- higher education --- students’ perceptions --- corporate governance --- ownership concentration --- agency cost --- firm performance --- dynamic panel model --- perception --- OHADA accounting --- transition --- IFRS --- comparability --- open market share repurchase --- hubris --- cumulative announcement returns --- endowed --- SMEs financing --- financing gap --- innovative activity --- innovation --- capital structure decisions --- bankruptcy --- data envelopment analysis --- logit --- model --- family firm --- non-family firm --- corporate performance --- Japan --- board of directors --- women in corporations --- financial microeconometrics --- multiple regression --- quantile regression --- diff-in-diff --- New Technology-Based Firms (NTBFs) --- internal and external innovativeness --- intangibility --- information disclosure --- timeliness of financial reporting --- law violation --- private firms --- corporate governance best practice --- corporate governance compliance --- company value --- Warsaw Stock Exchange --- accrual earnings management --- Nordic model --- n/a --- firm's efficiency --- investors' behavior --- students' perceptions

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