Browsing by Subject "Trading"
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Item Open Access Corporate Governance and Corporate Control: Evidence from Trading(2009) Haddaji, WadyIn Chapter 1, I document a negative (positive) relationship between changes in large (small) blockholders' ownership and abnormal returns. The evidence in this paper suggests that an increase in the relatively large blockholders' ownership raises the consumption of private benefits while an increase in the relatively small blockholders' ownership constrains large blockholders from expropriating minority shareholders. Moreover, I find an inversely U-shaped relationship between changes in the largest blockholders' ownership and firm value. As large blockholders' ownership and control increase, the negative effect of firm value driven by expropriating minority shareholders starts to exceed the incentive benefits of monitoring by the largest blockholder. I also show that the negative relationship between changes in institutional investors' control and abnormal returns declines as analysts' following increases.
In Chapter 2, I study the role of trading as a governance mechanism. I hypothesize that governance through trading plays a significant monitoring role in practice and that engaging in "voice" and "exit" can be substitutes. I show that abnormal turnover following earnings announcements is significantly higher for firms with large institutional blockholders than for those with small individual
shareholders. For firms with majority institutional ownership, I demonstrate that abnormal trading is higher for firms with multiple blockholders than for those with a single large blockholder and that abnormal trading increases with the number of institutional investors and declines with the percent of stocks owned by the
largest institutional investor. Moreover, this excess trading is driven by mutual fund investors, which are non-interventionist and thus are more likely to engage in "exit" than "voice". I also show that for firms with large institutional blockholders, abnormal trading following public announcements increases with liquidity.
Item Open Access HOW BLOCKCHAIN CAN BE USED FOR CREATING A MARKET FOR ENERGY SAVINGS CERTIFICATES(2019-04-19) Feng, Churong; Glassbrook, Keith; Lee, Songyun; Weiner, JennaThe goal of this project is to provide recommendations for the design of a blockchain ecosystem that can be used for creating or supporting a market for energy efficiency certificates, a trading commodity for packaging energy savings. There are examples of government-created and administered markets for energy efficiency credits in France, Italy, India, and Connecticut, but trading volume is thin. Four of the main challenges such a market must contend with in design are: (1) the measurement and verification of energy savings poses a large cost, (2) confirming that the energy efficiency project is additional is extremely challenging, (3) setting a target that is aggressive enough to make an impact is a difficult feat, and (4) defining the geographic boundary of the program is important to avoid leakage. The project team investigated blockchain methodologies, such as transactions, tokens, smart contracts, permission levels, and consensus mechanisms, to provide recommendations on integrating the desired functions of a blockchain ecosystem for energy efficiency certificates. The project team also reviewed in-depth research into blockchain technology and drew on applications of blockchain in the broader energy industry and the supply chain industry to inform the recommendations. Using this information, the team proposed a design for a blockchain ecosystem to support an energy efficiency certificate market.