The Global Research Analyst Settlement prohibited twelve large investment banks from tying equity analysts\u27 compensation to investment banking revenues, causing a large number of Institutional Investor all-star analysts to exit the sell-side industry. Using a difference-in-differences specification, I find that the departure of all-stars caused their bank-industry underwriting groups to lose equity issuance market share. Market share losses were more severe for IPOs than for IPOs and follow-on underwritings combined. The higher the average quality of all-stars in a bank-industry, the more severe were the bank-industry\u27s losses. Additionally, the departure of all-stars raised the cost of equity capital for IPOs underwritten by their ...
We investigate the empirical puzzle why banks pressured their analysts to provide aggressive assessm...
International audienceWe study the causal effects of analyst coverage on corporate investment and fi...
abstract: Responding to the allegedly biased research reports issued by large investment banks, the ...
The Global Research Analyst Settlement prohibited twelve large investment banks from tying equity an...
Regulators responded to the analyst scandals of the late 1990s by imposing extensive new rules on th...
The financial crisis provides a natural experiment to understand investment banks’ underwriting func...
We study the effect of the Global Analyst Research Settlement and related regulations on sell-side r...
Reforms on analyst conflicts of interest prohibit the use of investment banking revenue to fund equi...
Regulators have recently relaxed some provisions of the Global Research Analyst Settlement of 2003 (...
We examine the in-roads commercial banks have made into equity underwriting over 1990-2002. While ba...
Advanced producer services have long been theorized as pivotal in organizing the global economy. Fin...
We compare the selection of peer firms made by investment banks as underwriters at the IPO with that...
We investigate the empirical puzzle why banks pressured their analysts to provide aggressive assessm...
Advanced producer services have long been theorized as pivotal in organizing the global economy. Fin...
Despite the importance of sell-side analysts in the capital markets, we know little about the effect...
We investigate the empirical puzzle why banks pressured their analysts to provide aggressive assessm...
International audienceWe study the causal effects of analyst coverage on corporate investment and fi...
abstract: Responding to the allegedly biased research reports issued by large investment banks, the ...
The Global Research Analyst Settlement prohibited twelve large investment banks from tying equity an...
Regulators responded to the analyst scandals of the late 1990s by imposing extensive new rules on th...
The financial crisis provides a natural experiment to understand investment banks’ underwriting func...
We study the effect of the Global Analyst Research Settlement and related regulations on sell-side r...
Reforms on analyst conflicts of interest prohibit the use of investment banking revenue to fund equi...
Regulators have recently relaxed some provisions of the Global Research Analyst Settlement of 2003 (...
We examine the in-roads commercial banks have made into equity underwriting over 1990-2002. While ba...
Advanced producer services have long been theorized as pivotal in organizing the global economy. Fin...
We compare the selection of peer firms made by investment banks as underwriters at the IPO with that...
We investigate the empirical puzzle why banks pressured their analysts to provide aggressive assessm...
Advanced producer services have long been theorized as pivotal in organizing the global economy. Fin...
Despite the importance of sell-side analysts in the capital markets, we know little about the effect...
We investigate the empirical puzzle why banks pressured their analysts to provide aggressive assessm...
International audienceWe study the causal effects of analyst coverage on corporate investment and fi...
abstract: Responding to the allegedly biased research reports issued by large investment banks, the ...