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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
211

Investment manager trading behaviour and performance

Looi, Adrian, Banking & Finance, Australian School of Business, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
This dissertation presents an examination of the trading behaviour of active Australian fund managers. The thesis begins with an analysis of how fund manager trades relate to stock returns in the past, the present, and the future. The dissertation next proceeds to investigating how fund size affects fund performance, trading and portfolio construction. Finally, using earnings announcements as the locus for trading sequences, we analyse the nature of the information used by fund managers to predict stock returns. This research is presented in the form of three essays. The first essay investigates how active fund manager trades relate to stock returns. Using a unique database of daily transactions from Australian equity managers, we document that our sample of institutional investors exhibit statistically and economically significant predictive power in forecasting future stock returns over the ten days following their trades. Furthermore, detailed analysis indicates that manager style is important in understanding the link between institutional trading and stock returns. The essay finds growth-oriented managers are momentum traders, while style-neutral and value managers are contrarian. Further, the contemporaneous relation between institutional trading and returns depends on trade size, broker use, and investment style. Finally, the study documents that trades and returns are inversely related for value/contrarian managers and directly related for style-neutral and growth managers. The second essay presents an analysis of how fund size affects investment performance. Recent studies find evidence that small funds outperform large funds. This fund size effect is commonly hypothesized to be caused by transaction costs. Due to the lack of transactions data, prior studies have investigated the transaction costs theory only indirectly. This study however, analyses the daily transactions of active Australian equity managers and finds aggregate market impact costs incurred by large managers are significantly greater than that Finally, the third essay examines the nature of price-sensitive earnings information used by package formation and portfolio characteristics consistent with transaction cost intimidation. An analysis of the interaction between transaction cost intimidation and the fund size effect documents that large managers pursue a highly active trading strategy, and accordingly suffer more from the fund size effect than is the case for large funds following a less active trading strategy. This suggests the fund size effect is related to transaction costs as trading activity is a good proxy for expected market impact. Finally, the third essay examines the nature of price-sensitive earnings information used by fund managers to trade. While a number of recent mutual fund performance studies find data, prior studies have investigated the transaction costs theory only indirectly. This study however, analyses the daily transactions of active Australian equity managers and finds aggregate market impact costs incurred by large managers are significantly greater than that Finally, the third essay examines the nature of price-sensitive earnings information used by package formation and portfolio characteristics consistent with transaction cost intimidation. An analysis of the interaction between transaction cost intimidation and the fund size effect documents that large managers pursue a highly active trading strategy, and accordingly suffer more from the fund size effect than is the case for large funds following a less active trading strategy. This suggests the fund size effect is related to transaction costs as trading activity is incurred by small managers. Furthermore, large managers exhibit preferences for trade evidence of outperformance relative to suitably constructed benchmarks, limited research exists as to whether such outperformance is due to privately collected information, or merely expedient interpretation of publicly released information. In this essay an examination of the trade sequences of fund managers around earnings announcements is performed, and evidence is presented revealing an increased Occurrence of buy-sell trade sequences around good announcements and vice versa for bad announcements. The results also show an increase in the frequency of fund managers not trading before announcements, only to subsequently purchase during good announcements. Taken together, this evidence suggests managers are reliant on private information before earnings announcements, as well as them engaging in 'interpretation' of earnings announcements when they do not receive a private signal.
212

Investment manager trading behaviour and performance

Looi, Adrian, Banking & Finance, Australian School of Business, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
This dissertation presents an examination of the trading behaviour of active Australian fund managers. The thesis begins with an analysis of how fund manager trades relate to stock returns in the past, the present, and the future. The dissertation next proceeds to investigating how fund size affects fund performance, trading and portfolio construction. Finally, using earnings announcements as the locus for trading sequences, we analyse the nature of the information used by fund managers to predict stock returns. This research is presented in the form of three essays. The first essay investigates how active fund manager trades relate to stock returns. Using a unique database of daily transactions from Australian equity managers, we document that our sample of institutional investors exhibit statistically and economically significant predictive power in forecasting future stock returns over the ten days following their trades. Furthermore, detailed analysis indicates that manager style is important in understanding the link between institutional trading and stock returns. The essay finds growth-oriented managers are momentum traders, while style-neutral and value managers are contrarian. Further, the contemporaneous relation between institutional trading and returns depends on trade size, broker use, and investment style. Finally, the study documents that trades and returns are inversely related for value/contrarian managers and directly related for style-neutral and growth managers. The second essay presents an analysis of how fund size affects investment performance. Recent studies find evidence that small funds outperform large funds. This fund size effect is commonly hypothesized to be caused by transaction costs. Due to the lack of transactions data, prior studies have investigated the transaction costs theory only indirectly. This study however, analyses the daily transactions of active Australian equity managers and finds aggregate market impact costs incurred by large managers are significantly greater than that Finally, the third essay examines the nature of price-sensitive earnings information used by package formation and portfolio characteristics consistent with transaction cost intimidation. An analysis of the interaction between transaction cost intimidation and the fund size effect documents that large managers pursue a highly active trading strategy, and accordingly suffer more from the fund size effect than is the case for large funds following a less active trading strategy. This suggests the fund size effect is related to transaction costs as trading activity is a good proxy for expected market impact. Finally, the third essay examines the nature of price-sensitive earnings information used by fund managers to trade. While a number of recent mutual fund performance studies find data, prior studies have investigated the transaction costs theory only indirectly. This study however, analyses the daily transactions of active Australian equity managers and finds aggregate market impact costs incurred by large managers are significantly greater than that Finally, the third essay examines the nature of price-sensitive earnings information used by package formation and portfolio characteristics consistent with transaction cost intimidation. An analysis of the interaction between transaction cost intimidation and the fund size effect documents that large managers pursue a highly active trading strategy, and accordingly suffer more from the fund size effect than is the case for large funds following a less active trading strategy. This suggests the fund size effect is related to transaction costs as trading activity is incurred by small managers. Furthermore, large managers exhibit preferences for trade evidence of outperformance relative to suitably constructed benchmarks, limited research exists as to whether such outperformance is due to privately collected information, or merely expedient interpretation of publicly released information. In this essay an examination of the trade sequences of fund managers around earnings announcements is performed, and evidence is presented revealing an increased Occurrence of buy-sell trade sequences around good announcements and vice versa for bad announcements. The results also show an increase in the frequency of fund managers not trading before announcements, only to subsequently purchase during good announcements. Taken together, this evidence suggests managers are reliant on private information before earnings announcements, as well as them engaging in 'interpretation' of earnings announcements when they do not receive a private signal.
213

Impact of corruption on foreign direct investment at the industry level

Umar, Ayesha 04 January 2006 (has links)
This research studies the effect of corruption on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in various industries. We use industry level data of US Investments abroad in 60 host countries from 1990 to 2002. We explore the questions of whether corruption is an impediment to FDI and if so, how does this effect translate to different industrial sectors. The main element of interest is to see whether the impact of corruption is uniform across all industries or whether corruption affects various sectors differently depending on the nature of the sector. We conduct our study using a panel data model and find that the industry response to corruption is actually dissimilar across our given set of industries, based on the nature of the industry. Furthermore, we divide our dataset into sub samples of Less Developed Countries (LDC) and Developed Countries (DC) using GDP per capita as our basis for the distinction. We find corruption to attract FDI in our group of DC. In the case of LDC, we find the impact of corruption on FDI to vary from industry to industry. / Graduation date: 2006
214

Information Technology and the Volatility of Firm Performance

Hunter, Starling, Kobelsky, Kevin, Richardson, Vernon J. 12 March 2004 (has links)
This study investigates the impact of IT investments and several contextual variables on the volatility of future earnings. We find evidence that IT investments strongly increases the volatility of future earnings and that four contextual factors - industry concentration, sales growth, diversification, and leverage - strongly moderate IT's effect on earnings volatility. It is notable that while the main effect of IT spending on earnings volatility is strongly positive, not all of the moderators are. This suggests that there are conditions under which the positive risk-return relation can be either offset or even reversed. Taken together, these results suggest an explanation for what has recently been termed the "new productivity paradox", i.e. the apparent under-investment in information technology despite evidence of highly positive returns for doing so.
215

Procedimientos metodológicos para la toma de decisiones sobre inversiones en TI y su utilizacion en el BPA, Banco Popular de Ahorro

Sosa Flores, Miguel. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Doctor en Ciencias Economicas)--Universidad de Granma, 2006. / Title from PDF title page (viewed Mar. 5, 2007). At head of title: Republica de Cuba. "Universidade de Évora."--P. 1. "Universidad de Granma, Bayamo, Cuba."--P. 1. Includes bibliographical references.
216

The effect of taxes on capital market theory /

Seitz, Neil, January 1973 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 1973. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 146-150). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center.
217

Economic integration and environmental protection in China causes and effects /

Eastin, Josh C. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Arkansas, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references.
218

Foreign direct investment across China's provinces characteristics, determinants and impacts /

Fang, Zhou, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-170).
219

The role and impact of investment incentives on small and medium-sized enterprise development in Ethiopia.

Ayele, Seife. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Open University. BLDSC no. DX223839.
220

A study of the effects of free trade agreements on foreign direct investment

Moon, Jongchol, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2009. / Vita. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 95-97).

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