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Stock exchange

About: Stock exchange is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 39566 publications have been published within this topic receiving 612044 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the importance and price implications of style investing by institutional investors in the stock market were explored, and it was found that institutional investors reallocate across style groupings more intensively than across random stock groupings.
Abstract: This paper explores the importance and price implications of style investing by institutional investors in the stock market. To analyze styles, we assign stocks to deciles or segments across three style dimensions: size, value/growth, and sector. We find strong evidence that institutional investors reallocate across style groupings more intensively than across random stock groupings. In addition, we show that own segment style inflows and returns positively forecast future stock returns, while distant segment style inflows and returns forecast negatively. We argue that behavioral theories play a role in explaining these results.

147 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the overall acceptance of the German Corporate Governance Code recommendations and identified its critical standards that receive comparably less agreement among German listed companies, based on the compliance declarations of 408 firms listed at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
Abstract: In 2002, the German Corporate Governance Code was adopted. This paper examines the overall acceptance of the Code recommendations and identifies its critical standards that receive comparably less agreement among German listed companies. The study is based on the compliance declarations of 408 firms listed at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. The findings indicate a significantly high level of Code conformity which can be expected to increase in the future. Comparative analyses reveal that company size is positively associated with the extent of Code compliance. Neuralgic norms concern the personal liability and compensation of the board members, the staffing of the boards, the structure of the supervisory board and accounting requirements.

147 citations

01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this paper, the determinants of corporate hedging based on samples taken from non-financial firms on the United Kingdom's Financial Times Stock Exchange FTSE 250 were examined, and the results suggest that firms that face higher probability of financial distress are using derivatives as risk management tool to stabilised firms' cash flows.
Abstract: This study examined the determinants of corporate hedging based on samples taken from non-financial firms on the United Kingdom’s Financial Times Stock Exchange FTSE 250. In this study, derivative usage is used as the proxy for risk management. The research model was estimated using the univariate binomial probit model and the Heckman two-stage regression model. The result indicates that executives with options on company’s shares prefer risk-taking and choose not to hedge. The study also found that corporate hedging is positively related to (1) level of firms’ leverage and (2) proportion of total turnover spent for interest payment. These results suggest that firms that face higher probability of financial distress are using derivatives as risk management tool to stabilised firms’ cash flows. Finally, this study also found that large firms are more likely to use derivatives due to the benefits of economies of scale.

147 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors study marketable order imbalances, i.e., the net order flow resulting from trades that demand immediacy, and distinguish traders by trader type (individuals, domestic institutions, foreign institutions) and by the usual size of each trader's order.
Abstract: Data from the Taiwan Stock Exchange identify the originator of each submitted order, and there are no designated dealers or specialists. We study marketable order imbalances, i.e., the net order flow resulting from trades that demand immediacy. We distinguish imbalances by trader type (individuals, domestic institutions, foreign institutions) and by the usual size of each trader's order. Day-to-day persistence in order imbalance is strongest for small foreign institutions and weakest for large individual traders. Such persistence emanates both from splitting orders over time and from herding, and there is little evidence that aggregate price pressures from such persistence last beyond a trading day, indicating that de facto market making is quite effective. We attempt to discern which types of traders are de facto liquidity providers, which are likely to be informed, and which trade for liquidity reasons. The evidence indicates that all trader classes are successful market makers, large domestic institutions conduct the most informed trades, and large individuals are noise or liquidity traders.

147 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20232,414
20225,944
20211,840
20202,645
20192,535
20182,413