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A large body of finance literature documents long-term abnormal returns following corporate events. The existence of long-term abnormal returns suggests inefficiency of capital markets and was soon challenged by defenders of the efficient market hypothesis on methodological grounds. Reflecting this debate, Christian Fölster performs a comprehensive analysis of the long-term share price performance around initial public offerings (IPOs), seasoned equity offerings (SEOs) and share repurchase announcements in Germany and measures long-term performance in the two debated methodologies: event time and calendar time. While Christian Fölster can identify abnormal returns for IPOs and SEOs when measuring in event time, these results are not robust enough to support a switch to calendar time methodology. For share repurchases, Fölster cannot find any evidence of long-term abnormal returns in the German data, neither when he applies the event-time methodology nor when applying the calendar-time approach. Overall, the evidence on long-term performance following IPOs, SEOs, and share repurchase announcements is, thus, not sufficient to reject the hypothesis of market efficiency for Germany.
Nákup knihy
Long-term abnormal returns following selected corporate events, Christian Fölster
- Jazyk
- Rok vydání
- 2007
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- (měkká)
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Platební metody
Navrhnout úpravu
- Titul
- Long-term abnormal returns following selected corporate events
- Jazyk
- anglicky
- Autoři
- Christian Fölster
- Vydavatel
- Tectum-Verl.
- Rok vydání
- 2007
- Vazba
- měkká
- ISBN10
- 3828892833
- ISBN13
- 9783828892835
- Kategorie
- Skripta a vysokoškolské učebnice
- Anotace
- A large body of finance literature documents long-term abnormal returns following corporate events. The existence of long-term abnormal returns suggests inefficiency of capital markets and was soon challenged by defenders of the efficient market hypothesis on methodological grounds. Reflecting this debate, Christian Fölster performs a comprehensive analysis of the long-term share price performance around initial public offerings (IPOs), seasoned equity offerings (SEOs) and share repurchase announcements in Germany and measures long-term performance in the two debated methodologies: event time and calendar time. While Christian Fölster can identify abnormal returns for IPOs and SEOs when measuring in event time, these results are not robust enough to support a switch to calendar time methodology. For share repurchases, Fölster cannot find any evidence of long-term abnormal returns in the German data, neither when he applies the event-time methodology nor when applying the calendar-time approach. Overall, the evidence on long-term performance following IPOs, SEOs, and share repurchase announcements is, thus, not sufficient to reject the hypothesis of market efficiency for Germany.