We study the economic consequences of a recent SEC securities regulation change that grants foreign firms trading on the U.S. OTC market an automatic exemption from the reporting requirements of the 1934 Securities Act. We document that the number of voluntary (sponsored) OTC cross-listings did not increase following the regulation change, suggesting that it did not achieve its intended purpose of increasing voluntary OTC cross-listings through a reduction in compliance costs. We do find that the design of the regulation allowed financial intermediaries to create an unprecedented number of involuntary (unsponsored) OTC ADRs: 1,700 unsponsored ADR programs for 920 firms were created for companies that had previously chosen not to cross-list ...
This paper examines the factors that affect the decision of U.S. companies to issue securities offsh...
To ensure that our valuation effect is not driven by a few outlier firms that experienced large chan...
Using a modified international asset-pricing model we find strong evidence that publicly quoted firm...
We study the economic consequences of a recent SEC securities regulation change that grants foreign ...
We study a SEC regulation change that grants an automatic exemption from the 1934 Securities Act for...
We study a recent SEC regulation change that makes unsponsored (involuntary) cross-listings possible...
Although a number of prior papers have argued the benefits to foreign firms of cross-listing their s...
We examine the first significant deregulation of U.S. disclosure requirements since the passage of t...
Regulation S provides U. S. issuers with an exemption from the registration requirements of the Secu...
This paper will examine the possible consequences of unsponsored ADR’s on the foreign firm as a resu...
An emerging “bonding hypothesis ” holds that a firm’s geographic domicile may not determine its corp...
On March 21, 2007, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted Exchange Act Rule 12h-6 whi...
We examine the first significant deregulation of U.S. disclosure requirements since the passage of t...
An emerging “bonding hypothesis ” holds that a firm’s geographic domicile may not determine its corp...
This paper examines the factors that affect the decision of U.S. companies to issue securities offsh...
To ensure that our valuation effect is not driven by a few outlier firms that experienced large chan...
Using a modified international asset-pricing model we find strong evidence that publicly quoted firm...
We study the economic consequences of a recent SEC securities regulation change that grants foreign ...
We study a SEC regulation change that grants an automatic exemption from the 1934 Securities Act for...
We study a recent SEC regulation change that makes unsponsored (involuntary) cross-listings possible...
Although a number of prior papers have argued the benefits to foreign firms of cross-listing their s...
We examine the first significant deregulation of U.S. disclosure requirements since the passage of t...
Regulation S provides U. S. issuers with an exemption from the registration requirements of the Secu...
This paper will examine the possible consequences of unsponsored ADR’s on the foreign firm as a resu...
An emerging “bonding hypothesis ” holds that a firm’s geographic domicile may not determine its corp...
On March 21, 2007, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted Exchange Act Rule 12h-6 whi...
We examine the first significant deregulation of U.S. disclosure requirements since the passage of t...
An emerging “bonding hypothesis ” holds that a firm’s geographic domicile may not determine its corp...
This paper examines the factors that affect the decision of U.S. companies to issue securities offsh...
To ensure that our valuation effect is not driven by a few outlier firms that experienced large chan...
Using a modified international asset-pricing model we find strong evidence that publicly quoted firm...