S
Sungil Jeon
Researcher at Chonnam National University
Publications - 5
Citations - 408
Sungil Jeon is an academic researcher from Chonnam National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Earnings & Price–earnings ratio. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 362 citations.
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The impact of tour quality and tourist satisfaction on tourist loyalty: The case of Chinese tourists in Korea
TL;DR: In this article, the causal relationship between tourist expectations, tourist motivations, tour quality, tourist satisfaction, tourist complaints and tourist loyalty of Chinese tourists in the Republic of Korea using path analysis was examined.
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Investigating structural relations affecting the effectiveness of service management
TL;DR: In this article, a structural equation model was developed by including seven constructs and tested for their relations among airline crews and found that trust and cooperation appeared to positively affect the effectiveness of airline service operation.
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The relationship between persistence of abnormal earnings and usefulness of accounting information in hotel companies.
TL;DR: In this paper, the persistence of abnormal earnings has a systematic relation with book value of equity and earnings and the persistence is measured using the first auto-correlation coefficient of abnormal profits for two consecutive periods.
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The persistence of abnormal earnings and systematic risk.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship between the persistence of abnormal earnings and systematic risk in hotel firms and developed prediction models of systematic risk for hotel firms, which indicated that the importance of external factors for the profitability of hotel firms was significantly related to non-accounting variables.
Journal Article
Effect of Investor Relations on Cost of Debt Capital
Sungil Jeon,Jeong Eun Kim +1 more
TL;DR: Corporate disclosure is effective in reducing the share of private information in the capital market and the incentives for investors to search for exclusively available information, easing information asymmetry (Diamond, 1985; Verrecchia, 2001) as discussed by the authors.