We examine how keiretsu-related institutional investors behave in the Japanese stock market relative to other investor categories for the period from 1985-1998. Based on the agency problem hypothesis for the general bias of institutional investors and the relational distance hypothesis for the unusual bias of keiretsu-affiliated money managers, this paper finds that keiretsu-affiliated money managers over-invest not only in large firms, but also in imprudent firms. The group affiliation of Japanese domestic money managers may drive their portfolio decisions towards financially weak group member firms at the expense of their client investors. Identifying the conditions for this rescue type of investment, we illustrate a rather weak corporate...
August 2001This paper was presented at the conference on Designing Financial Systems in East Asia an...
Why do large firms in Japan hold small percentages of stock in trading partners? A firm that holds s...
textabstractUsing data spanning the 1996-1998 fiscal years of 247 of Japan's largest manufacturers, ...
We examine how foreign and variously grouped domestic investors similarly or dissimilarly bias in th...
This study examines the behavioural biases of Japanese institutional investors and discusses implica...
In this paper, we investigate the investment behaviour of institutional investors in terms of their ...
In this paper, we investigate the investment behaviour of institutional investors in terms of their ...
Banks and insurance companies in Japan have been more inclined to hold stock directly and indirectly...
Central to so many accounts of post-war Japan, the keiretsu corporate groups have never had economic...
Japan’s adaptation of corporate governance : keiretsu face to banking competition and institutional ...
Japan’s adaptation of corporate governance : keiretsu face to banking competition and institutional ...
Central to so many accounts of post-war Japan, the keiretsu corporate groups have never had economic...
Using a sample of 11,629 firm-years between 1993 and 1998, I examine the investment policies of firm...
We study institutional herding in Japan. Japanese firms are primarily owned by financial institution...
Why do large firms in Japan hold small percentages of stock in trading partners? A firm that holds s...
August 2001This paper was presented at the conference on Designing Financial Systems in East Asia an...
Why do large firms in Japan hold small percentages of stock in trading partners? A firm that holds s...
textabstractUsing data spanning the 1996-1998 fiscal years of 247 of Japan's largest manufacturers, ...
We examine how foreign and variously grouped domestic investors similarly or dissimilarly bias in th...
This study examines the behavioural biases of Japanese institutional investors and discusses implica...
In this paper, we investigate the investment behaviour of institutional investors in terms of their ...
In this paper, we investigate the investment behaviour of institutional investors in terms of their ...
Banks and insurance companies in Japan have been more inclined to hold stock directly and indirectly...
Central to so many accounts of post-war Japan, the keiretsu corporate groups have never had economic...
Japan’s adaptation of corporate governance : keiretsu face to banking competition and institutional ...
Japan’s adaptation of corporate governance : keiretsu face to banking competition and institutional ...
Central to so many accounts of post-war Japan, the keiretsu corporate groups have never had economic...
Using a sample of 11,629 firm-years between 1993 and 1998, I examine the investment policies of firm...
We study institutional herding in Japan. Japanese firms are primarily owned by financial institution...
Why do large firms in Japan hold small percentages of stock in trading partners? A firm that holds s...
August 2001This paper was presented at the conference on Designing Financial Systems in East Asia an...
Why do large firms in Japan hold small percentages of stock in trading partners? A firm that holds s...
textabstractUsing data spanning the 1996-1998 fiscal years of 247 of Japan's largest manufacturers, ...