Academic literature on the topic 'Insider ownership'

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Journal articles on the topic "Insider ownership"

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Hsieh, Jim, and Qinghai Wang. "Insiders' Tax Preferences and Firms' Choices between Dividends and Share Repurchases." Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 43, no. 1 (2008): 213–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022109000002805.

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AbstractThis paper investigates whether corporate payout policy is associated with insiders' share holdings and their tax preferences. We find that insider ownership and the implied tax liabilities are positively related to a firm's propensity to employ share repurchases. Firms with higher levels of or greater increases in insider ownership prefer stock repurchases to cash dividends. This relation is more significant in years when dividends were more tax disadvantaged relative to capital gains. Our findings are robust to the endogeneity of insider ownership and the inclusion of various control variables such as firm size, permanence of cash flows, growth opportunities, institutional ownership, and executive stock options. Overall, our results suggest that personal tax considerations from insiders affect corporate payout decisions.
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Park, Jinwoo, Kengo Shiroshita, Naili Sun, and Yun W. Park. "Involuntary delisting in the Japanese stock market." Managerial Finance 44, no. 9 (2018): 1155–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/mf-04-2017-0126.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze the wealth effect of involuntary delisting and investigate insider opportunism and the role of corporate governance, liquidity and legal environment in involuntary delisting in Japan’s stock market. Design/methodology/approach The authors use a sample of 136 involuntarily delisted firms in Japan’s stock markets between 2002 and 2012. The authors examine ownership changes of inside shareholders prior to delisting and estimate regression models for the wealth effect of involuntary delisting. Findings Involuntary delisting is highly disruptive in Japan, and limited liquidity of delisted stocks appears to be an important cause. However, the ownership reduction of inside shareholders before delisting is limited, totaling 2–3 percent. For delisted firms with an insider bank, the decrease in share price leading up to a delisting announcement is much less, while the decrease in share price upon a delisting announcement is far greater. Originality/value The study investigates involuntary delisting in regard to the opportunistic behavior of inside shareholders and the role of institutional environment in Japan’s stock market. Insiders, especially insider banks, maintain ownership in a distressful context leading to the forcible delisting of a distressed firm. The authors find some evidence that suggests that the market believes the insider bank will try to prevent the ailing firm’s insolvency. The findings are consistent with the implicit relational contracts that characterize Japanese firms.
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Zeleny, Milan. "Insider ownership and LBO performance." Human Systems Management 16, no. 4 (1997): 243–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/hsm-1997-16401.

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Marquardt, Blair B., Brett W. Myers, and Xu Niu. "Strategic voting and insider ownership." Journal of Corporate Finance 51 (August 2018): 50–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcorpfin.2018.05.002.

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Yi, Bingsheng, Jang Shee Barry Lin, and Jane Mooney. "Equity ownership structure and corporate performance using industry-adjusted measures." Corporate Ownership and Control 7, no. 4 (2010): 49–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.22495/cocv7i4sip7.

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This paper applies a more robust methodology in industry-adjustment on measuring firm performance as related to ownership structure. We consider insider ownership, institutional ownership, and blockholder ownership. Even after controlling for the endogeneity of insider ownership, we still find positive effect of insider ownership on firm performance, which is conflicting with results found by other recent studies. We find a non-linearity in the relationship between insider ownership and firm performance, but our results do not support a relationship as neat as the inverse U-shape effect found by earlier studies. Our results indicate that the effects of the insider and square of insider on performance are positive, yet the effect of the cubic of insider ownership on firm performance is negative. As no other study based on U.S. data used the cubic of insider ownership and document its effect, our finding is new. We find strong negative effect of blockholder ownership on firm performance, and our results indicate that institutional investors are efficient monitors whose existence helps improving firm value and protecting outside minority shareholders.
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Muchlas, Zainul. "PENGARUH AGENCY COST TERHADAP KINERJA KEUANGAN PERUSAHAAN KELUARGA MENGGUNAKAN TOBIN’S Q & ALTMAN Z-SCORE." Jurnal Ilmiah Bisnis dan Ekonomi Asia 11, no. 2 (2018): 92–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.32812/jibeka.v11i2.66.

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This research aims to test the effect of agency cost toward financial performance in family business measured by Tobin’s Q and Altman Z-Score with proxied by insider ownership, dispersion ownership, institutional ownership. This research was conducted at family business firms listed in Indonesian Stock Exchange from 2011-2015. In this research, multiple linear regression analysis were used. The result show the agency cost (insider ownership, dispersion ownership, institutional ownership) simultaneously have a significant effect toward Tobin’s Q, insider ownership and institutional ownership are not significant toward Tobin’s Q, dispersion ownership has a significant effect toward Tobin’s Q, agency cost (insider ownership, dispersion ownership, institutional ownership) simultaneously and partial are not significant toward Altman Z-Score.
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Wang, Jacqueline Wenjie, and Wayne W. Yu. "Insider Ownership and Analyst Forecast Properties." Journal of Accounting, Auditing & Finance 34, no. 1 (2017): 125–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0148558x17691669.

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In this article, we investigate the effect of insider ownership on analyst forecast properties and find a significant nonlinear relationship between the two. Specifically, in the low to medium range, a rise in insider ownership improves analyst forecast properties (making them more accurate and less dispersed), but a further rise in insider ownership beyond moderate levels leads to deteriorating forecasts. We also find that this nonlinear relationship is attenuated for firms in countries with better investor protection. We interpret our findings as evidence that the role of insider ownership as an interest alignment or entrenchment mechanism is diminished in these countries due to their stronger investor protection.
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Lin, Jang Shee Barry, Bingsheng Yi, and Jane Mooney. "Interplay among the large investor groups and the ownership-performance relationship." Corporate Ownership and Control 9, no. 3 (2012): 79–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.22495/cocv9i3art7.

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This paper applies several methodologies to examine the interplay among large shareholders. We find that firm performance is positively associated with insider and institutional ownership, but negatively associated with blockholder ownership. More importantly, we find that insider and institutional ownership are negatively related to each other, functioning as substitutes. However, they are both positively related to blockholder ownership, indicating that the endogenous optimal ownership requires higher insider and/or institutional ownership when there is high blockholder ownership. Methodologically, we find that using residual ownership reduces or eliminates spurious variations in the non-linear relationship between firm performance and insider ownership, and industry adjustment generates more reliable estimates. This paper sheds light on the complex interplay among these various types of large investors.
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Diala, Lucy Uche, and Robert Houmes. "The impact of high insider ownership on SOX 404 internal controls." Corporate Governance: The International Journal of Business in Society 20, no. 1 (2019): 106–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/cg-03-2019-0087.

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Purpose This study aims to investigate the effect of high insider ownership on firms’ internal controls over financial reporting. In particular, it examines how high insider ownership affects the likelihood of an adverse Sarbanes–Oxley Act Section (SOX Section 404) opinion and its subsequent remediation. Design/methodology/approach Tests of hypotheses use ineffective controls and remediation models. The initial tests in this study use ineffective internal controls over financial reporting probit regression models to investigate how high insider ownership affects the ex-post likelihood of an adverse 404 opinion. Two remediation models – a multinominal probit regression and probit regression model – are used to investigate the effect of high insider ownership on the likelihood of successfully remediating an adverse 404 opinion. Findings Results show that while the ex-ante likelihood of an adverse SOX Section 404 auditor’s internal control opinion increases with high insider ownership, high insider ownership firms are more likely to remediate ineffective 404 controls. This study rationalizes these diverse findings by asserting that prior to an adverse 404 opinion, entrenched managers avoid internal control financial reporting oversight and monitoring. After an adverse opinion, however, and within the context of an imminent and explicit value reducing 404 opinion, powerful high insider owner managers are motivated to remedy ineffective controls. Originality/value This research synthesizes existing streams of literature on insider ownership and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting quality to provide new information on the effects of high insider ownership on firms’ internal controls.
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Niu, Jijun. "Insider ownership, power, and bank value." Journal of Economic & Financial Studies 4, no. 04 (2016): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.18533/jefs.v4i04.243.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Insider ownership"

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Jakupovic, Benjamin, Marcus Karlsson, and Peter Westberg. "Inside the Head of an Insider : Motivation for those who are Hired to Motivate." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för marknadsföring (MF), 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-96265.

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The purpose of this thesis is to increase the understanding of how senior management executives experience insider ownership. An additional aim is to investigate if there is a difference of the experiences of senior management executives with a Swedish cultural background in comparison to the experiences of senior management executives with other cultural backgrounds, with regards to insider ownership. By distribution of a questionnaire, partly through telephone interviews and in part via email, empirical primary data is gathered. The empirical findings indicate that insider ownership has a broad area of use and that senior management executives experience insider ownership as a source of motivation. Further, the study indicates that insider ownership is experienced as a motivational source regardless of cultural background since the study sees tendencies of that personal characteristics outweigh the cultural permeation. The findings of this study imply tendencies that show many different positive effects of insider ownership. For example, insider ownership could be a motivational source, a governance tool for creating trust among employees and other interlinked stakeholders. This could in turn mean that insider ownership contributes to a more cooperative working environment. Also, insider ownership has been portrayed as a possible catalyst for increased motivation. Thus, insider ownership could be a source for increased individual performance, and thus, company performance. Additionally, one of the major findings of this study is the tendencies that could prove to be of interest for future research, for example; that the feeling of fear might be superior to the feeling of greed
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Moldenhauer, Benjamin. "Insider ownership, shareholder structures and corporate governance /." Sternenfels : Verl. Wissenschaft & Praxis, 2007. http://deposit.d-nb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=2882441&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm.

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Moldenhauer, Benjamin. "Insider ownership, shareholder structures and corporate governance." Sternenfels Verl. Wiss. & Praxis, 2006. http://deposit.d-nb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=2882441&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm.

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Moldenhauer, Benjamin [Verfasser]. "Insider Ownership, Shareholder Structures and Corporate Governance. / Benjamin Moldenhauer." Berlin : Duncker & Humblot GmbH, 2020. http://d-nb.info/1238494609/34.

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Zhukov, Vladimir S. "Corporate governance, strategies and performance of privatised industrial firms in the FSU." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.297542.

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Puleo, Michael. "Insider Share-Pledging and Firm Investors." Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2016. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/386109.

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Business Administration/Finance<br>Ph.D.<br>Corporate insiders frequently borrow from lending institutions and pledge personal equity shares as collateral for the loan. Using manually collected pledge data for January 2007-December 2011, I examine how this phenomena affects firm investors and analyze agency conflicts between pledging managers and (a) outside shareholders, and (b) bondholders. Pledging potentially influences investor risk through changing managerial incentives and/or contingency risk from ill-timed margin calls. Findings suggest influential insiders extract private benefits of control at the expense of outside shareholders through pledging. Difference-in-differences regressions utilizing an exogenous shock to lending supply indicate pledging corresponds with a 9.9% relative increase in stock volatility – controlling for changes in fundamentals – and support a causal interpretation of the relation between pledging and equity risk. Despite apparently harming equity investors however, further analysis suggests pledging benefits bondholders, and corresponds with an economically and statistically significant reduction in yield spreads on corporate bonds. Robustness tests evidence reductions in risky financing when insiders pledge, corroborating the negative relation between pledging and cost of debt and consistent with mitigated agency conflicts between managers and bondholders.<br>Temple University--Theses
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Hollsten, Mia, and Daniel Svensson. "Insiderägande, CSR och dess påverkan på skatteaggressivitet : En kvantitativ studie på 273 europeiska börsbolag." Thesis, Högskolan i Gävle, Företagsekonomi, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hig:diva-29219.

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Syfte: CSR är idag ett väl använt och diskuterat begrepp. Även företagsskatt är ett omdiskuterat ämne där många av de metoder som företag använder sig av för att kraftigt minska skatten kan ifrågasättas. Då skatt kan ses som ett sätt att bidra till samhället i stort har studier av CSR, som är ett socialt ansvarstagande, blivit intressant att studera i förhållande till skatt. Motstridiga studier leder dock till att ett behov finns att undersöka faktorer som kan påverka förhållandet. Ägarstruktur kan ha en påverkan på hur arbetet med företags sociala ansvarstagande ser ut samt hur skatteaggressivt det är. Den föreliggande studien undersöker därför om insiderägande är en faktor som har en modererande effekt på förhållandet mellan CSR och skatteaggressivitet. Metod: Studien utgår från en positivistisk forskningsfilosofi med en hypotetisk-deduktiv ansats. Studien har en kvantitativ strategi och en longitudinell design som genomförts med data över tio år från 273 publika europeiska företag, för åren 2008–2017. I studien har sekundärdata använts inhämtad från databasen Thomson Reuters Eikon. Insamlat datamaterial har analyserats i statistikprogrammet SPSS. Resultat &amp; slutsats: Resultaten visar att insiderägande har en modererande effekt på sambandet mellan CSR och skatt. Genom undersökningen framkommer det att det är nivån av insiderägande som bestämmer riktningen på förhållandet mellan CSR och skatteaggressivitet. Slutsatsen som kan nås är att ägarstruktur är en faktor som bör tas i beaktning vid studier av sambandet mellan skatt och CSR. Examensarbetets bidrag: Undersökningen lämnar ett unikt bidrag till redovisningsforskningen då den är den enda att studera ägarstrukturens påverkan på CSR och skatteaggressivitet genom att titta på insiderägande. Studien lämnar också ett praktiskt bidrag till myndigheter och organisationer om de ägarstrukturer som kan påverka företags inställning till hållbarhetsredovisning och skattebeteende. Utöver detta breddas den empiriska forskningen på europeiska bolag och sambandet mellan CSR och skatt. Förslag till fortsatt forskning: Förslag till vidare forskning ges i form av studier på vilken typ av aktier som innehas av insiders, det vill säga om innehavet innebär röststarka aktier eller inte. Förslag ges också till att studera olika grupper av insiders då det kan finnas skillnader inom en bred definition av insiders i huruvida personen i stor utsträckning associeras med företaget. Det ges även förslag på att inte mäta CSR som ett samlat begrepp utan istället studera dimensionerna som separata beroende variabler då det kan finnas skillnader som inte upptäcks då begreppet mäts som en helhet.<br>Aim: CSR is an often-used term and a well-discussed topic. Corporate tax is also an often debated subject where many of the methods used by companies to greatly reduce tax can be questioned. Since tax can be seen as a way to contribute to society at large, studies of CSR, which is a way for companies to take social responsibility, have become interesting to study in relation to tax. Contradicting studies, however, lead to the need to investigate factors that may affect the relationship. Ownership structure can have an impact on corporate social responsibility and how tax-aggressive a company is. This study therefore investigates whether insider ownership is a factor that has a moderating effect on the relationship between CSR and tax aggressiveness. Method: The study is based on a positivistic research philosophy with a hypothetical-deductive approach. The study has a quantitative strategy and a longitudinal design using ten-year data of 273 public European companies, for the years 2008-2017. In the study, secondary data has been used retrieved from the Thomson Reuters Eikon database. Collected data has been analyzed in the statistical program SPSS. Result &amp; Conclusions: The results show that insider ownership has a moderating effect on the relationship between CSR and tax. This study shows that it is the level of insider ownership that determines the direction of the relationship between CSR and tax aggressiveness. The conclusion that can be reached is that ownership structure is a factor that should be taken into account in studies examining the relationship between tax and CSR. Contribution of the thesis: This study provides a unique contribution to the field of accounting research as it is the only one to study the impact of ownership structure on CSR and tax aggressiveness by examining insider ownership. The study also provides a practical contribution to government institutions and organizations about the ownership structures that can affect companies’ attitude towards sustainability reporting and tax behavior. In addition to this, empirical research on European companies and the relationship between CSR and tax are broadened. Suggestions for future research: Further research is needed in the form of studies on the type of shares held by insiders, i.e. if the holding contains voting shares or not. Further research is also needed to study different groups of insiders as there may be differences within a broad definition of insiders as to whether the person is largely associated with the company or not. In addition, there are also suggestions for more research that does not measure CSR as one variable. By studying the dimensions that make up CSR as separate variables there may be differences that are not detected when it is measured as one variable.
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Kayanga, Andrew Mulindwa. "Essays in Corporate Governance: Issues and Evidence from Equity Carve-Outs." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2008. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/892.

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This dissertation consists of three essays examining the relation between corporate governance and firm performance. The theme of this study is that the widely documented long-term underperformance in equity carve-outs can be partly explained by weak corporate governance. The first essay presented in Chapter 2 explores the effect of shareholder-rights protection on the performance of a sample of firms that initiated a carve-out during the period 1983-2004. Using the Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (2003) index and Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell (2004) entrenchment index, as proxies for the quality of shareholder-rights protection, I provide evidence that firms with better shareholder rights protection outperform those with weaker rights protection. Results indicate that the weaker the rights protection, the greater the degree of underperformance. Overall, the results are robust to measures of firm performance and to model specification. The second essay presented in Chapter 3 examines the relation between firm performance and board structure. In particular, I study how board size, board independence, and CEO duality influence firm performance. I find that board size for non-financial firms is negatively related to firm performance but positively associated with performance for financial firms. Board independence is positively related to firm performance and CEO duality is negatively associated with performance for both financial and non-financial firms. These results are robust to various measures of firm performance. The conflicting evidence on board size, between financials and non-financials, seems to suggest that the scope and complexity of a firm.s operations drives board size. The third essay presented in Chapter 4 investigates corporate ownership and firm performance. I focus on insider ownership, outside blockholder ownership, and ownership concentration. Results show that insider ownership is negatively related to firm performance even at low levels of insider ownership levels. It is plausible that the combination of parent ownership and management ownership in the subsidiary exacerbate the entrenchment effect thus overwhelming the incentive alignment effects that theory posits. I document a positive relation between outside blockholder ownership and firm performance. And finally, I show that the level of ownership concentration increases (decreases) in anticipation of positive (negative) changes in firm performance.
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Boujelbene, Nadia. "L'impact de la structure de propriété sur la liquidité des titres : étude empirique sur le marché financier Tunisien." Thesis, Cergy-Pontoise, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011CERG0504.

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Cette thèse analyse le lien entre la gouvernance d'entreprise et la liquidité par une validation empirique sur un échantillon d'entreprises cotées sur le marché boursier tunisien. Ce choix est motivé par le fait que les différences dans les systèmes de gouvernance entre les pays dans plusieurs aspects (concentration de la propriété, identité des actionnaires…) pourraient avoir des effets différents sur la liquidité des titres. Plus spécifiquement, nous nous proposons d'étudier, l'effet d'un mécanisme de gouvernance interne sur le coût de liquidité pour en déduire l'impact sur le coût du capital et par la suite la performance espérée des firmes. Dans un premier temps, nous appréhendons le concept de liquidité et mesurons son degré. Dans un deuxième temps, nous étudions la relation entre la liquidité et la performance des entreprises. La contribution du coût du service d'immédiateté se traduit par un escompte additionnel sur le coût du capital et la valeur des sociétés. Les résultats trouvés montrent que les fourchettes de prix sont reliées positivement à la rentabilité des fonds propres en valeur de marché. Ces résultats confirment que les entreprises les moins liquides doivent suggérer une rentabilité supérieure aux investisseurs (une prime d'illiquidité) afin de compenser la ponction des coûts de transactions sur la rentabilité de leurs portefeuilles. Enfin, nous constatons que la liquidité est un facteur non négligeable dans le domaine de la gouvernance d'entreprise dans la mesure où les grands actionnaires affectent négativement la liquidité des titres de l'entreprise. Nos résultats concluent à des implications différentes quant à l'identité des actionnaires. Les insiders augmentent les coûts de liquidité en raison de leur accès à l'information privée et pertinente. De même, une participation institutionnelle dans l'entreprise réduit la liquidité de ses titres mesurée par l'impact sur les prix<br>This thesis analyzes the link between corporate governance and liquidity by an empirical validation on a sample of companies listed on the Tunisian stock market. We propose in the first chapter an overview of theoretical models and empirical concept of liquidity. In the second chapter, we are a part, an empirical study on stock liquidity in our sample, performing a descriptive analysis of the microstructure of the Tunisian financial market to highlight the degree of liquidity. In a second step, we study the relationship between liquidity and firm performance. We propose in the third chapter a presentation of models operating the link between liquidity and value firm through the ownership structure. We are also interested in this chapter to the impact of liquidity cost on the performance and value of companies. The contribution of the service cost of immediacy translates into an additional discount on the cost of capital and the value of companies. In the fourth chapter, we conduct a comprehensive study of the influence of the liquidity of Tunisian companies on their performance. In a third step, we study the impact of ownership structure on liquidity. This part includes two chapters. The fifth chapter is devoted to the development of assumptions made in explaining the link between ownership concentration and liquidity. In the sixth chapter, we test our research hypotheses on the influence of the characteristics of the structure of corporate ownership on the stock liquidity
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Rösch, Christoph G. [Verfasser], Christoph [Akademischer Betreuer] Kaserer, and Isabell M. [Akademischer Betreuer] Welpe. "Market Liquidity : An empirical analysis of the impact of the financial crisis, ownership structures and insider trading / Christoph G. Rösch. Gutachter: Isabell M. Welpe ; Christoph Kaserer. Betreuer: Christoph Kaserer." München : Universitätsbibliothek der TU München, 2012. http://d-nb.info/1025538692/34.

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Books on the topic "Insider ownership"

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Kristen, Clive. Buying a property in France: An insider guide to realising your dream. How To Books, 2007.

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Kristen, Clive. Buying a property in France: An insider guide to finding a home in the sun. 2nd ed. How To Books, 2002.

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Tyson-Ward, Sue. Buying a property in Portugal: An insider guide to buying a dream home in the sun. 2nd ed. How To Books, 2007.

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Buying a property in Portugal: An insider guide to buying a dream home in the sun. 2nd ed. How To Books, 2007.

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King, Harry. Buying a property in Spain: An insider guide to finding a home in the sun. How To Books, 2007.

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Ravina, Enrichetta. What do independent directors know?: Evidence from their trading. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006.

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Ravina, Enrichetta. What do independent directors know?: Evidence from their trading. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006.

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Canada, Canada Industry. Canada Business Corporations Act: Discussion paper : insider trading. Industry Canada, 1996.

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Christian, Schröder. Handbuch Kapitalmarktstrafrecht. Heymanns, 2007.

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Gomez, Mariette Himes. Houses: Inside and out. HarperCollins, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Insider ownership"

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Aronoff, Craig E., and John L. Ward. "Managing the Insider-Outsider Dilemmas." In Family Business Ownership. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230116023_8.

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Chakraborty, Indrani. "Insider Ownership and the Performance of Firms in India: Evidence from a Panel Semi-parametric Regression Model." In Economics, Management and Sustainability. Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-1894-8_11.

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Müller, Holger M., and Karl Wärneryd. "Inside versus outside ownership: a political theory of the firm." In 40 Years of Research on Rent Seeking 2. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-79247-5_41.

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Walravens, Nils, Pieter Ballon, Mathias Van Compernolle, and Koen Borghys. "Data Ownership and Open Data: The Potential for Data-Driven Policy Making." In The Data Shake. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63693-7_2.

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AbstractAs part of the rhetoric surrounding the Smart City concept, cities are increasingly facing challenges related to data (management, governance, processing, storage, publishing etc.). The growing power acquired by the data market and the great relevance assigned to data ownership rather than to data-exploitation knowhow is affecting the development of a data culture and is slowing down the embedding of data-related expertise inside public administrations. Concurrently, policies call for more open data to foster service innovation and government transparency. What are the consequences of these phenomena when imagining the potential for policy making consequent to the growing data quantity and availability? Which strategic challenges and decisions do public authorities face in this regard? What are valuable approaches to arm public administrations in this “war on data”? The Smart Flanders program was initiated by the Flemish Government (Belgium) in 2017 to research and support cities with defining and implementing a common open data policy. As part of the program, a “maturity check” was performed, evaluating the cities on several quantitative and qualitative parameters. This exercise laid to bare some challenges in the field of open data and led to a checklist that cities can employ to begin tackling them, as well as a set of model clauses to be used in the procurement of new technologies.
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Gelles, Michael G. "Identifying Functional Ownership." In Insider Threat. Elsevier, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-802410-2.00004-6.

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Goergen, Marc, Luc Renneboog, and Jana Fidrmuc. "Insider Trading, News Releases, and Ownership Concentration." In Insider Trading. CRC Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420074031.ch17.

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"Insider Securities Ownership and Trading." In Running a Public Company. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119203254.ch15.

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Jones, Derek C., and Mark Klinedinst. "Insider Ownership and Firm Performance: Evidence from Bulgaria." In Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory & Labor-Managed Firms. Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/s0885-3339(2012)0000013011.

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Tariq, Hassaan, Faisal Shahzad, Asim Anwar, and Ijaz Ur Rehman. "Economic Consequences of Insider-ownership: An Emerging Market Perspective." In International Symposia in Economic Theory and Econometrics. Emerald Publishing Limited, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/s1571-038620190000026007.

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Hansen, Laura Pinto. "Regulatory Ambiguity." In Handbook of Research on Theory and Practice of Financial Crimes. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-5567-5.ch008.

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Ordinarily “black money” is considered a part of illegal transactions involving cash payments. However, in the case of illegal insider trading, illegal profits are often hidden in the purchase of luxury items and financial investments through offshore accounts. Aiding in this particular white-collar crime is the ambiguity of regulation, often dependent on the political whims of whatever party is in office at the time. Adding to the confusion is the fact that in some cases, “insider traders” are acting legitimately, as in the case of senior executives with stock buying options within their compensation or with lower-level employees participating in employee stock ownership programs (ESOPs). Though there are exhaustive ways by which illegal trading information is passed around, there are certain industries, including finance, that lend themselves to greater risk for employee involvement in illegal insider trading. This chapter includes discussions of mergers and acquisitions frenzies, as well as hedge funds and their contributions to illegal insider trading.
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Conference papers on the topic "Insider ownership"

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Chen, Ruey-Shii, Sing-Yu Lee, Sheng-Yun Yu, and Chun-Chieh Hsieh. "The Nature of News, Insider Ownership, Stock Price and Stock Returns." In 2009 First International Conference on Information Science and Engineering. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icise.2009.1234.

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Liu, Yijuan, and Yanping Zhu. "Notice of Retraction: A Study of Adjusting Speed of Insider Ownership in Chinese Listed Companies: Evidence from the Adjustment Cost Approach." In 2010 International Conference on E-Business and E-Government (ICEE 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icee.2010.899.

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Zheng, Weijun. "Ownership Influences on Vertical B2B E-marketplaces’ Survival." In InSITE 2009: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3336.

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A vertical electronic marketplace (EM) is an inter-organizational intermediary within a single industry that enables participating buyers and sellers to exchange information about price and product offerings and to cooperate on commodity exchange. Using a Relational View (RV) perspective, this paper develops theoretical arguments that explain the impact of ownership on the likelihood of vEM survival. With a survival analysis, this paper provides empirical support for the theoretical arguments using data collected on 159 vEMs across six industries. The paper found that EM ownerships with industry ties will have higher survival rates than those without.
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Wettstein, Hans E. "80 Years Open GT Development in Baden." In ASME Turbo Expo 2019: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2019-90177.

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Abstract On 07.07.1939 the Neuchatel gas turbine passed its performance test under the supervision of Aurel Stodola [1]. This was the world’s first open gas turbine for electric power generation in commercial operation. It launched the past eighty year period of further development and corresponding market growth. The Baden area played an important role. The aim of this paper is to complete the already published comprehensive historical information with two additional aspects especially regarding the second 40 years, in which the author was an involved contemporary witness: The first is how the predominance of something like a local spirit integrated both a considerable share of foreign engineering staff and also the changes of the ownership of the technology from Brown Boveri to ABB and then to Alstom and recently to GE and Ansaldo. The second aspect is the inside view of the author, who has both shaped and suffered these gas turbine developments in several job positions allowing direct contact to both top management and shop floor workers. These two aspects will be integrated in the historical sequence. As a rule the roles of the persons acting after the seventies are given but not their names. The history of the involved companies has caught much attention of media and writers. After the formation of ABB it was used for both celebrating outstanding management performance and despicable management mistake. I will add as an engineer my insider view to this and mention the corresponding book references. This paper is limited to the mainstream open GT development for space reasons and therefore omits other interesting side developments of BBC such as closed Helium cycles, IGCC applications and compressed air energy storage as well as the other products of BBC, which all played a role in equalizing the business cycles.
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Buzzetto-More, Nicole, and Retta Sweat-Guy. "The Technology Ownership and Information Acquisition Habits of HBCU Freshmen." In InSITE 2007: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3113.

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In a world of expanding information and technological resources, there is increasingly a need for a citizenry that is able to access and use information and technology effectively (American Library Association, 2000). An information and technologically literate person should have access to, and be able to use, a host of available resources that include libraries, databases, and the internet in order to retrieve, evaluate, and use information effectively (Weil, 2006). This paper reports the findings of a study conducted at two Historically Black Universities that examined technology ownership and usage, as well as, the information acquisition habits of freshmen.
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Thilakaweera, Bolanda, Charles Harvie, and Amir Arjomandi. "Bank Ownership and Efficiency in Post-conflict Era: Evidence from Sri Lanka." In InSITE 2014: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/2029.

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Kotani, Masafumi. "Enterprise Applications Portfolio Management Utilizing COTS." In InSITE 2004: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/2764.

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The software assets that an enterprise applies toward the management of its business processes are bound to evolve in response to business model transformations dictated by changing management environments. Both a given set of software and its associated data form an asset portfolio that needs to be well managed to generate the greatest possible return over time. Tradeoffs between the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership, consisting of development and subsequent maintenance costs) and implementation speed present significant challenges to management decision-making. Here, a portfolio configuration management framework designed from a decision-maker’s point of view is proposed, and an experimental evaluation result is reported.
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Robinson Beachboard, Martine, and John C. Beachboard. "Implications of Foreign Ownership on Journalistic Quality in a Post-Communist Society: The Case of Finance." In InSITE 2006: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3029.

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When freedom from Communism largely eliminated overt government censorship of newspapers, other political and business pressures appeared. Consequently, Southeastern European newspaper publishers faced threats to financial viability and editorial integrity. The editor-in-chief of one newspaper in the former Yugoslavian republic of Slovenia claims to have found freedom from political and advertiser influence after a global media conglomerate invested in the publication. Notably, the business daily Finance is the only hard-news start-up to survive in the eleven years since Slovenia gained independence from the Republic of Yugoslavia. This research paper offers a provocative example where international investment appears to have contributed to the democratizing of media in a post-communist society. The paper is not intended to argue that foreign media investments are necessarily beneficial but to suggest some circumstances in which foreign media investment can be advantageous to the democratic aspirations of a society.
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Tella, Adeyinka, and Ganiat Adebola Adebola Aduke Kosoko-Oyedeko. "Ownership and Use of Laptops by Communication and Information Sciences Undergraduates at the University of Ilorin Nigeria." In InSITE 2013: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/1869.

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"Usage Habits in Music Streaming Applications and Their Influence on Privacy Related Issues [Research in Progress]." In InSITE 2019: Informing Science + IT Education Conferences: Jerusalem. Informing Science Institute, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4272.

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Aim/Purpose: In this exploratory study we examine personal information management within music streaming applications. Also, we investigate the sense of ownership over songs being played on music streaming applications and whether the use of these services may be considered a social activity. In a later stage, we intend to test privacy related issues in music streaming applications and the factors that influence privacy concerns when using these services. Methodology: This is examined by using a mixed methodology and consists of two phases: qualitative and quantitative. The qualitative stage includes semi-structured interviews with 10 music streaming application users in order to explore the possible change in personal information management, following the emergence of these applications (e.g. change in classification methods and song retrieval methods). The quantitative phase includes the distribution of closed ended questionnaires among 200-250 users of music streaming applications, aiming to explore personal information management issues and privacy related issues that emerge while using these applications (e.g. privacy concerns). Currently, a pilot of the qualitative stage was issued. Findings: We found that users still rely on traditional methods of personal information management, rather than making use of the newer features available by the innovative music streaming applications. The same applies to the use of these applications as part of a social activity. In addition, it seems that the emergence of music streaming applications influenced the sense of ownership over songs in personal music libraries and made it ambiguous among music consumers. Contribution: As far as we know, this is the first academic research to investigate the issue of personal music management among music streaming applications and the also the first to use a mixed methods approach to examine digital music consumption. In addition, it is the first study that takes into account privacy related issues among the users of music streaming applications.
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