textabstractThe thesis consists of four empirical studies in the areas of corporate finance and financial reporting. The first study examines CEOs’ familiarity with segments and how that familiarity affects their divestiture decisions. The results show that longer-tenured CEOs divest assets about half as often from familiar segments as from non-familiar segments. The study also shows that the familiarity effect is costly. The second study examines a firm’s selection procedure of financial advisors, including the choice of advisor nationality and experience, when making a cross-border acquisition. Characteristics of both the target and acquirer-nation, such as formalism, financial sophistication, and investor protection influence the acquire...