I provide empirical evidence that badly governed firms respond more to aggregate shocks than do well governed firms. I build a simple model where managers are prone to over invest and where shareholders are more willing to tolerate such a behavior in good times. The model successfully explains the average profit differences as well as the cyclical behavior of sales, employment and investment for firms with different governance qualities. The quantitative results suggest that governance conflicts can explain 30% of aggregate volatility
This dissertation contributes to different areas in empirical corporate governance: composition of b...
We reexamine long-term abnormal returns for portfolios sorted on governance characteris-tics. Firms ...
Efficient Markets Hypothesis, one of the main theories of traditional finance, states that markets a...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administratio...
This dissertation comprises three essays in the field of empirical corporate finance and it contribu...
This paper examines the hypothesis that firms in competitive industries should benefit relatively le...
Within a broad sample of US manufacturing \u85rms, we \u85nd that increased governance quality is as...
Empirical studies of corporate governance address potential endogeneity problems, but fail to place ...
Despite a great deal of interest by institutional investors and others in the issue of corporate gov...
The effect of corporate governance and managers on the value of companies has received great attenti...
An undervalued firm is exposed to potential takeover or managerial turnover. Thus, bad corporate gov...
<p>In Chapter 1, I document a negative (positive) relationship between changes in large (small) bloc...
This paper studies corporate governance when a firm faces imperfect competition. We derive firms' de...
The thesis comprises three independent though topically related papers that empirically investigate ...
We study how the investor protection environment affects corporate managers’ incentives to take valu...
This dissertation contributes to different areas in empirical corporate governance: composition of b...
We reexamine long-term abnormal returns for portfolios sorted on governance characteris-tics. Firms ...
Efficient Markets Hypothesis, one of the main theories of traditional finance, states that markets a...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administratio...
This dissertation comprises three essays in the field of empirical corporate finance and it contribu...
This paper examines the hypothesis that firms in competitive industries should benefit relatively le...
Within a broad sample of US manufacturing \u85rms, we \u85nd that increased governance quality is as...
Empirical studies of corporate governance address potential endogeneity problems, but fail to place ...
Despite a great deal of interest by institutional investors and others in the issue of corporate gov...
The effect of corporate governance and managers on the value of companies has received great attenti...
An undervalued firm is exposed to potential takeover or managerial turnover. Thus, bad corporate gov...
<p>In Chapter 1, I document a negative (positive) relationship between changes in large (small) bloc...
This paper studies corporate governance when a firm faces imperfect competition. We derive firms' de...
The thesis comprises three independent though topically related papers that empirically investigate ...
We study how the investor protection environment affects corporate managers’ incentives to take valu...
This dissertation contributes to different areas in empirical corporate governance: composition of b...
We reexamine long-term abnormal returns for portfolios sorted on governance characteris-tics. Firms ...
Efficient Markets Hypothesis, one of the main theories of traditional finance, states that markets a...