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Building on the Best from the Cellars of FinanceMarch 5-7, 2015
Department of Finance FinanceDown Under
Department of Finance
Finance Down UnderBuilding on the Best from the Cellars of FinanceMarch 5-7, 2015
Organised byDepartment of Finance Faculty of Business and EconomicsThe University of Melbourne
Finance Down Under 2015 Building on the Best from the Cellars of Finance 1
Welcome to Finance Down Under (FDU) 2015The Department of Finance in the Faculty of Business and Economics at the University of Melbourne welcomes everyone to its annual Finance Down Under conference.
Submissions again reached record levels in both quantity and quality this year, and we selected only 20 papers from among more than 250 submissions. These 20 papers from all areas in finance (Corporate Finance, Asset Pricing, Investments, and Market Microstructure) received high ratings from the 157-member program committee, and we have a nice group of academics who will provide discussions on the accepted papers.
Our unique format includes a special symposium built around ‘vintage’ work in finance that has withstood the test of time and continued to inspire current research. This year, FDU will celebrate the 25 years of research influenced by the 1990 publication of three classic papers by Andy Lo and A. Craig MacKinlay: “When are contrarian profits due to stock market overreaction?”; “Data-snooping biases in tests of financial asset pricing models”; and “An econometric analysis of nonsynchronous trading”. We are honoured to have Professor A. Craig MacKinlay as a keynote speaker, as well as keynote presentations by Professors Maureen O’Hara, Lubos Pastor and Allan Timmermann. We have also selected two papers for Saturday’s special session in honour of Lo and MacKinlay’s classic papers.
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FINANCE DOWN UNDER 2015: Building on the Best from the Cellars of Finance
PROGRAM SUMMARY
Thursday, March 5, 2015 (Melbourne Zoo) 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Wine Reception (Rainforest Room) Welcome Speech: John Handley, University of Melbourne Keynote Speech: Maureen O’Hara, Cornell University
Friday, March 6, 2015 (Melbourne Cricket Ground) 9:30 am – 10:00 am
Registration and Morning Coffee (Registration Desk) 10:00 am – 11:15 am
Parallel Sessions I (Jack Ryder Rooms and Premiership Club Room) 11:15 am – 12:00 pm
Keynote Speech: A. Craig MacKinlay, University of Pennsylvania 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
Lunch (Premiership Club Room) 1:30 pm – 2:45 pm
Parallel Sessions II (Jack Ryder Rooms and Premiership Club Room) 2:45 pm – 3:15 pm
Afternoon Tea 3:15 pm – 4:30 pm
Parallel Sessions III (Jack Ryder Rooms and Premiership Club Room) 4:45 pm – 5:30 pm
MCG Guided Tour 5:45 pm – 7:45 pm
Wine Reception (Premiership Club Room) Keynote Speech: Allan Timmermann, University of California San Diego
Saturday, March 7, 2015 (The Spot Building: Copland Theatre, Level B1) 9:00 am – 10:00 am
Coffee and tea served 10:00 am – 11:15 am
Special Session 11:15 am – 12:00 pm
Keynote Speech: Lubos Pastor, University of Chicago 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm
Lunch (Dean’s Boardroom, Level 12, The Spot Building) 1:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Food and Wine Experience (Yarra Valley) Best Paper Award and Announcement
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Premiership Club Room Jack Ryder Room 1 Jack Ryder Room 2
Parallel Sessions I
Theoretical Asset Pricing in the Presence of Diverse,
Disparate, Divergent Decision Makers
Overinvestment, Underinvestment, Just Right
Investment
Financial Decision Making: Without Gambling, I Would
Not Exist – Hunter S. Thompson
March 6, 10:00 am – 11:15 am
Value or Growth? Pricing of Idiosyncratic Cash-Flow Risk with Heterogeneous Beliefs
Retail Traders and the Competitive Allocation of
Attention
Does Short Selling Discipline Overinvestment?
The Impact of Covenant Violations on Corporate
Investment in R&D
Fooled By Randomness? Financial Decision-Making Under Model Uncertainty
When Saving is Gambling
Parallel Sessions II
Empirical Asset Pricing with K Factors: 1<K<3, K is an
Integer
Theoretical Corporate Finance: The Short and the
Long Run of It Containing Contagion
March 6, 1:30 pm – 2:45 pm
Linking Cross-Sectional and Aggregate Expected Returns
Growth Expectations, Dividend Yields, and Future
Stock Returns Is Market Timing Good for
Shareholders?
Corporate Policies with Temporary and Permanent
Shocks
Counterparty Risk and the Establishment of the New
York Stock Exchange Clearinghouse
Tracing Out Capital Flows: How Financially Integrated Banks Respond to Natural
Disasters
Parallel Sessions III
Funds Finishing First Empirical Corporate Finance: The Long and the Short Run
of It Market Microstructure
March 6, 3:15 pm – 4:30 pm
Mutual Fund Competition, Managerial Skill, and Alpha
Persistence
The Freedom of Information Act and the Race Towards
Information Acquisition
Managerial Myopia and Debt Maturity
Do Long-Term Investors Improve Corporate Decision
Making?
High Frequency Trading and the 2008 Short Sale Ban
Shades of Darkness: A Pecking Order of Trading
Venues
Special Session: Overreacting to Nonsynchronous Data-snooping (The Spot, Basement Theatre)
March 7, 10:00 am – 11:15 am
Is Aggregate Idiosyncratic Risk Priced? Follow the Bid-Ask Bounce
Asset Pricing with Index Investing
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PROGRAM DETAILS
FRIDAY, March 6, 2015, 10:00 am – 11:15 am
Theoretical Asset Pricing in the Presence of Diverse, Disparate, Divergent Decision Makers – Premiership Club Room Session Chair: Andrea Lu, University of Melbourne
Value or Growth? Pricing of Idiosyncratic Cash-Flow Risk with Heterogeneous Beliefs Michael F. Gallmeyer, University of Virginia Hogyu Jhang, Georgia Institute of Technology Hwagyun Kim, Texas A&M University
Retail Traders and the Competitive Allocation of Attention Shaun W. Davies, University of Colorado, Boulder
Discussants: Qi Zeng, University of Melbourne Filippo Massari, University of New South Wales
Overinvestment, Underinvestment, Just Right Investment – Jack Ryder Room 1 Session Chair: Sturla Fjesme, University of Melbourne
Does Short Selling Discipline Overinvestment? Eric C. Chang, University of Hong Kong Tse-Chun Lin, University of Hong Kong Xiaorong Ma, University of Hong Kong
The Impact of Covenant Violations on Corporate Investment in R&D Sudheer Chava, Georgia Institute of Technology Vikram K. Nanda, Rutgers Business School Steven Chong Xiao, Rutgers Business School
Discussants: Garry Twite, University of Melbourne Jordan Neyland, University of Melbourne
Financial Decision Making: Without Gambling, I Would Not Exist – Hunter S. Thompson – Jack Ryder Room 2 Session Chair: André Gygax, University of Melbourne
Fooled By Randomness? Financial Decision-Making Under Model Uncertainty Elise Payzan-LeNestour, University of New South Wales
When Saving is Gambling J. Anthony Cookson, University of Colorado, Boulder
Discussants: Joshua Shemesh, University of Melbourne Carsten Murawski, University of Melbourne
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FRIDAY, March 6, 2015, 1:30 pm – 2:45 pm
Empirical Asset Pricing with K Factors: 1<K<3, K is an Integer – Premiership Club Room Session Chair: Joachim Inkmann, University of Melbourne
Linking Cross-Sectional and Aggregate Expected ReturnsSerhiy Kozak, University of Michigan Shrihari Santosh, University of Maryland
Growth Expectations, Dividend Yields, and Future Stock Returns Zhi Da, University of Notre Dame Ravi Jagannathan, Northwestern University Jianfeng Shen, University of New South Wales
Discussants: Federico Nardari, University of Melbourne Antonio Gargano, University of Melbourne
Theoretical Corporate Finance: The Short and the Long Run of It – Jack Ryder Room 1 Session Chair: Ali Akyol, University of Melbourne
Is Market Timing Good for Shareholders? Ilona Babenko, Arizona State University Yuri Tserlukevich, Arizona State University Pengcheng Wan, Arizona State University
Corporate Policies with Temporary and Permanent Shocks Jean-Paul Decamps, Toulouse School of Economics Sebastian Gryglewicz, Erasmus University Erwan Morellec, Swiss Finance Institute Stephane Villeneuve, Toulouse School of Economics
Discussants: Neal Galpin, University of Melbourne Hae Won (Henny) Jung, University of Melbourne
Containing Contagion – Jack Ryder Room 2 Session Chair: Vidhan Goyal, HKUST
Counterparty Risk and the Establishment of the New York Stock Exchange Clearinghouse Asaf Bernstein, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Eric N. Hughson, Claremont McKenna College Marc D. Weidenmier, Claremont McKenna College
Tracing Out Capital Flows: How Financially Integrated Banks Respond to Natural Disasters Kristle R. Cortés, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland Philip E. Strahan, Boston College
Discussants: Spencer Martin, University of Melbourne Lei Zhang, Nanyang Technological University
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FRIDAY, March 6, 2015, 3:15 pm – 4:30 pm
Funds Finishing First – Premiership Club Room Session Chair: Allaudeen Hameed, National University of Singapore
Mutual Fund Competition, Managerial Skill, and Alpha Persistence Gerard Hoberg, University of Maryland Nitin Kumar, Indian School of Business Nagpurnanand R. Prabhala, University of Maryland
The Freedom of Information Act and the Race Towards Information Acquisition Antonio Gargano, University of Melbourne Alberto G. Rossi, University of Maryland Russ R. Wermers, University of Maryland
Discussants: Juan Sotes-Paladino, University of Melbourne Oliver Boguth, Arizona State University
Empirical Corporate Finance: The Long and the Short Run of It – Jack Ryder Room 1 Session Chair: Ning Gong, University of Melbourne
Managerial Myopia and Debt Maturity Indraneel Chakraborty, Southern Methodist University Andrew MacKinlay, Southern Methodist University William F. Maxwell, Southern Methodist University
Do Long-Term Investors Improve Corporate Decision Making? Jarrad Harford, University of Washington Ambrus Kecskes, York University Sattar Mansi, Virginia Tech
Discussants: Stefan Petry, University of Melbourne Jeffrey Harris, American University
Market Microstructure – Jack Ryder Room 2 Session Chair: Carole Comerton-Forde, University of Melbourne
High Frequency Trading and the 2008 Short Sale Ban Johnathan Brogaard, University of Washington Terrence Hendershott, University of California - Berkeley Ryan Riordan, Queen’s University
Shades of Darkness: A Pecking Order of Trading Venues Albert J. Menkveld, VU University Amsterdam Bart Z. Yueshen, INSEAD Haoxiang Zhu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Discussants: Bryan Lim, University of Melbourne Zhuo Zhong, University of Melbourne
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SATURDAY, March 7, 2015, 10:00 am – 11:15 am
Special Session: Overreacting to Nonsynchronous Data-snooping – The Spot, Copland Theatre Session Chair: Burton Hollifield, Carnegie Mellon University
Is Aggregate Idiosyncratic Risk Priced? Follow the Bid-Ask Bounce David A. Lesmond, Tulane University Yihua Zhao, Tulane University
Asset Pricing with Index Investing Georgy Chabakauri, London School of Economics and Political Science Oleg Rytchkov, Temple University
Discussants: Thijs van der Heijden, University of Melbourne Vincent Grégoire, University of Melbourne
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BIOGRAPHY OF KEYNOTE SPEAKERSA. Craig MacKinlay Joseph P. Wargrove Professor of Finance, Wharton Business School, University of Pennsylvania.
In addition to teaching, he is also a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Craig is the co-author of two books, the Econometrics of Financial Markets and A Non-Random Walk Down Wall Street.
https://fnce.wharton.upenn.edu/profile/955/
Maureen O’Hara Robert W. Purcell Professor of Finance, Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University
Professor O'Hara's research focuses on issues in market microstructure, and she is the author of numerous journal articles as well as the book Market Microstructure Theory (Blackwell: 1995). Her most recent research looks at the role of toxicity in affecting liquidity in high frequency markets. Dr. O'Hara also publishes widely on a broad range of topics including banking and financial intermediaries, law and finance, and experimental economics. Professor O’Hara has served as President of the American Finance Association, the Western Finance Association, the Financial Management Association, the Society for Financial Studies and the International Atlantic Economic Society. She was formerly the Executive Editor of the Review of Financial Studies. Professor O’Hara is Chairman of the Board of Directors of Investment Technology Group, Inc (ITG), a global agency brokerage firm, and she serves on the Board of Directors of NewStar Financial, a commercial finance company, where she is on the audit and governance committees. She also serves on the Board of Trustees of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association (TIAA-CREF). She is a member of the CFTC-SEC Emerging Regulatory Issues Task Force (the “flash crash” committee), the Global Advisory Board of the Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI), and the Advisory Board of the Office of Financial Research, U.S. Treasury. She has consulted for a number of companies and organizations, including Microsoft, Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse, the New York Stock Exchange, Bristol-Meyers Squibb, and the World Federation of Exchanges.
https://www.johnson.cornell.edu/Faculty-And-Research/Profile/id/mo19
A former member of the Board of Directors of the American Finance Association and the NASD Economic Advisory Board, Craig's research interests include empirical implementation and validation of asset pricing models, measuring investment performance, pricing of futures contracts, microstructure of financial markets, assessment of credit risk, and statistical methods in finance.
Maureen O’Hara is the Robert W. Purcell Professor of Finance at the Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University. She holds degrees from the University of Illinois (B.S. Economics), and Northwestern University (M.S. Economics and Ph.D. Finance), and Honorary Doctorates from Facultés Universitaires Catholiques à Mons (FUCAM), Belgium and Universität Bern, Switzerland.
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Lubos Pastor
http://www.chicagobooth.edu/faculty/directory/p/lubos-pastor
Allan TimmermannAtkinson/Epstein Endowed Chair, Professor of Finance, Rady School of Management, University of California San Diego
Timmermann has developed new methods in areas such as forecasting under structural breaks, forecast combinations and evaluation of predictive skills. He serves as an associate editor on leading journals in financial economics and econometrics. Timmermann earned his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge.
http://rady.ucsd.edu/faculty/directory/timmermann/
Professor Pastor’s research focuses mostly on financial markets and asset management. He has written on a broad range of topics such as liquidity risk, political uncertainty, stock price bubbles, stock volatility, return predictability, technological revolutions, portfolio choice, performance evaluation, returns to scale in active management, indexing, and IPOs. He has analyzed various effects of parameter uncertainty and learning in finance. His articles have appeared in the American Economic Review, Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economics, Journal of Political Economy, Review of Financial Studies, as well as nonacademic outlets such as Bloomberg and the Financial Times. His research has been awarded numerous prizes, such as two Smith Breeden Prizes, two Fama/DFA Prizes, Whitebox Advisors Selected Research Prize, Goldman Sachs Asset Management Prize, Barclays Global Investors Prize, Rothschild Caesarea Center Best Paper Award, two Geewax, Terker & Co. Prizes, Marshall Blume Prize, the NASDAQ Award, and the Q Group Award.
Professor Pastor has been teaching at Chicago Booth since 1999 when he obtained a Ph.D. in finance from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He has received the McKinsey Award for Excellence in Teaching as well as two Faculty Excellence Awards at Chicago Booth. In his student years, Professor Pastor won awards in chess and mathematics, mainly in his native Slovakia. In his spare time, he enjoys sports, reading, and spending time with his family.
Lubos Pastor is Charles is Charles P. McQuaid Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. He is also co-director of the Fama-Miller Center for Research in Finance, Vice President of the Western Finance Association, member of the CRSP Indexes Advisory Council, Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, and Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy and Research. In addition, he is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Finance and Journal of Financial Economics, and a former Associate Editor of the Review of Financial Studies.
Timmermann uses a mix of theory, data and econometric techniques to understand the behavior of prices and expectations in financial markets.His objective is to understand what determines the movement of security prices and to use this in managing risk, forming portfolios and forecasting future price movements. He has also studied mutual fund and pension fund performance.
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ABSTRACTS
Theoretical Asset Pricing in the Presence of Diverse, Disparate, Divergent Decision Makers
Value or Growth? Pricing of Idiosyncratic Cash-Flow Risk with Heterogeneous Beliefs Michael F. Gallmeyer, Hogyu Jhang and Hwagyun Kim
We study a continuous-time pure exchange economy where idiosyncratic cash flow risks are priced via investors' heterogeneous beliefs. Investors perceive idiosyncratic cash flow risks differently through heterogeneous subjective mean growth rates on a firm's cash flow. This impacts equilibrium quantities. Our model shows that idiosyncratic cash flow shocks priced through belief differences can explain cross-sectional variations in stock returns and cash flows. Quantitative results show that a value premium arises, as value stocks have higher idiosyncratic cash-flow volatilities, lower average cash flows, and higher belief differences, which is empirically supported. A growth premium prevails without belief differences.
Retail Traders and the Competitive Allocation of Attention Shaun W. Davies
I consider a rational expectations framework in which attention constrained individuals compete against each other and institutions. The model reconciles a set of empirical facts that cannot be simultaneously explained by standard theories: retail trader portfolios are highly correlated, retail traders tend to follow some stocks and ignore others, and aggregate trades from retail traders are profitable over short horizons and predict future returns (even controlling for past returns or past volume). Additionally, the equilibrium herding behavior of individuals suggests that their actions are not subsumed by institutions. Instead the herd competes directly against institutions. The analysis also yields novel predictions regarding portfolio composition and turnover.
Overinvestment, Underinvestment, Just Right Investment
Does Short Selling Discipline Overinvestment? Eric C. Chang, Tse-Chun Lin and Xiaorong Ma
We explore the disciplining effect of short selling on overinvestment. Firms with more stock lending supply have higher abnormal announcement stock returns of acquiring firms, lower subsequent abnormal capital investments, and longer spells between large investments, and higher subsequent Tobin’s Q and ROA. Alleviating the endogeneity concern, our multivariate difference-in-difference analysis shows that this disciplinary force of lending supply is more effective for firms in the Regulation SHO-PILOT Program. We identify two mechanisms through which short selling disciplines managers: managers’ wealth-performance sensitivity and likelihood of hostile takeovers. Additionally, the disciplinary force only exists for non-financial-constrained firms and non all-cash M&A deals.
The Impact of Covenant Violations on Corporate Investment in R&D Sudheer Chava, Vikram K. Nanda and Steven Chong Xiao
Using regression discontinuity design, we show that corporate investment in R&D declines sharply following a financial covenant violation, wherein creditors can use the threat of accelerating the loan to influence changes in firm policies. The reduction in R&D is more severe in firms with low R&D efficiency i.e., when firm R&D is less productive in terms of ROA and results in fewer patents and citations. Consequently, despite a decrease in R&D, covenant-violating firms do not suffer a drop in innovative output (patents and citations-to-patents). These results highlight that lenders are judicious in exercising their control rights after covenant violations and suggest that bank financing can be a viable source of financing for innovative firms.
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Financial Decision Making: Without Gambling, I Would Not Exist
Fooled By Randomness? Financial Decision-Making Under Model Uncertainty Elise Payzan-LeNestour
Tail risk is pervasive in financial markets. Overlooking it often leads to blow-ups. Here I consider assets that yield steady streams of good payoffs but eventually inflict a major loss, leading the investor to blow up. Learning about those assets’ risk/reward profiles is crucial yet challenging. When asked to perform a stylized version of the task, participants managed to learn in a Bayesian way. However, many still chose to invest in these assets, apparently owing to an overwhelming desire to pick pennies. These findings may help flesh out key psychological forces at stake during financial manias.
When Saving is Gambling J. Anthony Cookson
This paper investigates whether financial gambles substitute for casino gambling using the introduction of lottery-linked savings accounts in Nebraska as a natural experiment. Using proprietary data on casino cash withdrawals, the introduction of savings lotteries induces consumers in affected regions to reduce casino gambling by half relative to unaffected regions. The estimated effect is stronger if savings lotteries and casino gambling have similar attributes, consistent with the interpretation that the effect reflects substitution across gambling products. Examining the substitution pattern more deeply, I find savings lotteries appeal most to high dollar-value gamblers with better financial habits. These findings suggests that savings lotteries can be an effective tool to improve savings rates by appealing to gambling preferences, but the introduction of savings lotteries is not merely a substitute for financial education. Indeed, the impact of savings lotteries on casino gambling would be greater if consumers have better ex ante financial habits.
Empirical Asset Pricing with K Factors: 1<K<3, K is an Integer
Growth Expectations, Dividend Yields, and Future Stock Returns Zhi Da, Ravi Jagannathan and Jianfeng Shen
According to the dynamic version of the Gordon growth model, the long-run expected return on stocks, stock yield, is the sum of the dividend yield on stocks plus some weighted average of expected future growth rates in dividends. We construct a measure of stock yield as a model-imposed affine combination of dividend yield and an expected dividend growth proxy measured from sell-side analysts' near-term earnings forecasts. Stock yield predicts US stock index returns well, with an out-of-sample R-squared that is consistently above 2% at monthly frequency over our sample period. When both dividend yield and expected dividend growth are used as explanatory variables in a multivariate regression without any coefficient restriction to predict future stock returns, the in-sample R-squared is almost the same as that for stock yield, but the out-of-sample R-squared is only about half of that for stock yield, which suggests that dividend yield, expected dividend growth and expected future returns are tied together through the present-value relation. Stock yield also predicts future stock index returns in other G7 countries and returns of US stock portfolios formed by sorting stocks based on firm characteristics, at various horizons. The findings are consistent with a single dominant factor driving expected returns on stocks over different holding periods. That single factor extracted from the cross section of stock yields using the Kelly and Pruitt (2013) partial regressions method predicts stock index returns better. The performance of the Binsbergen and Koijen (2010) latent factor model for forecasting stock returns improves significantly when stock yield is included as an imperfect observation of expected return on stocks. Consistent with folk wisdom, stock returns are more predictable coming out of a recession. Our measure performs as well in predicting stock returns as the implied cost of capital, another common stock yield measure that uses additional information.
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Theoretical Corporate Finance: The Short and the Long Run of It
Is Market Timing Good for Shareholders? Ilona Babenko, Yuri Tserlukevich and Pengcheng Wan
We challenge the view that equity market timing always benefits shareholders. By distinguishing the effect of a firm’s equity decisions from the effect of mispricing itself, we show that market timing can decrease shareholder value. Additionally, the timing of equity sales has a more negative effect on existing shareholders than the timing of share repurchases. Our theory can be used to infer firms’ maximization objectives from their observed market timing strategies. We argue that the popularity of stock buybacks, the low frequency of seasoned equity offerings, and the observed post-event stock returns are consistent with managers maximizing current shareholder value.
Corporate Policies with Temporary and Permanent Shocks Jean-Paul Decamps, Sebastian Gryglewicz, Erwan Morellec and Stephane Villeneuve
We develop a dynamic model of investment, cash holdings, financing, and risk management policies in which firms face financing frictions and are subject to permanent and temporary cash flow shocks. In this model, target cash holdings depend on the long-term prospects of the firm, implying that the payout policy of the firm, its financing policy, and its cash-flow sensitivity of cash display a more realistic behaviour than in prior models with financing frictions. In addition, risk management policies are richer and depend on the nature of cash flow shocks and potential collateral constraints. Lastly, the timing of investment and the firms initial asset mix both reflect financing frictions and the joint effects of permanent and temporary shocks.
Containing Contagion
Counterparty Risk and the Establishment of the New York Stock Exchange Clearinghouse Asaf Bernstein, Eric N. Hughson and Marc D. Weidenmier
Heightened counterparty risk during the recent financial crisis has raised questions about the role clearinghouses play in global financial stability. Empirical identification of the effect of centralized clearing on counterparty risk is challenging because of the co-incidence of macro-economic turbulence and the introduction of clearinghouses. We overcome these concerns by examining a novel historical experiment, the establishment of a clearinghouse on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 1892. During this period the largest NYSE stocks were also listed on the Consolidated Stock Exchange (CSE), which already had a clearinghouse. Using identical securities on the CSE as a control, we find that the introduction of clearing reduced annualized volatility of NYSE returns by 90-173bps and increased asset values. Prior to clearing,
Linking Cross-Sectional and Aggregate Expected Returns Serhiy Kozak, Shrihari Santosh
We propose a one state variable ICAPM that rationalizes the size, value, and momentum “anomalies” observed in stock returns. Our main insight is that differential covariance with news about future market discount rates drives the observed crosssectional variation in expected returns. We find that in response to an increase in expected future market discount rates, large, growth, and recent losers company stocks outperform small, value, and recent winner stocks, respectively. Our interpretation is that such an increase in discount rates represents “bad” news for the representative investor, increasing his marginal utility of wealth. We further show that ignoring this state variable leads to drastic underestimation of the equilibrium price of “level risk” measured using bond returns. An augmented model which adds a “level” factor jointly prices both stock and bond returns.
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shocks to overnight lending rates reduced the value of stocks on the NYSE, relative to identical stocks on the CSE, but this was no longer true after the establishment of clearing. We also show that at least ½ of the average reduction in counterparty risk on the NYSE is driven by a reduction in contagion risk –the risk of a cascade of broker defaults. Our results indicate that clearing can cause a significant improvement in market stability and value through a reduction in network contagion and counterparty risk.
Tracing Out Capital Flows: How Financially Integrated Banks Respond to Natural Disasters Kristle R. Cortés and Philip E. Strahan
Multi-market banks reallocate capital when local credit demand increases after natural disasters. Following such events, credit in unaffected but connected markets declines by about 50 cents per dollar of additional lending in shocked areas, but most of the decline comes from loans in areas where banks do not own branches. Moreover, banks increase sales of more-liquid loans in order to lessen the impact of the demand shock on credit supply. Larger, multi-market banks appear better able than smaller ones to shield credit supplied to their core markets (those with branches) by aggressively cutting back lending outside those markets.
Funds Finishing First
Mutual Fund Competition, Managerial Skill, and Alpha Persistence Gerard Hoberg, Nitin Kumar and Nagpurnanand R. Prabhala
Whether fund managers can generate positive alpha and do so persistently are key questions in the mutual fund literature. We propose a new economic force that limits persistence in alpha: competition from other funds that cater to similar segments of investor demand. We make three contributions. First, we use new spatial methods to identify the dynamic competition faced by funds. Second, we develop a new measure of fund manager skill, viz., the ability of a fund to beat its spatially close rivals. The skill measure predicts alphas for at least four quarters ahead. Finally, we show that alpha is persistent only when a fund has few rivals. This new persistence is not driven by diseconomies of scale, is economically large, and lasts up to four quarters. Thus, besides the scale diseconomies emphasized by Berk and Green (2004), competition between funds is a potent force that limits the persistence of alpha.
The Freedom of Information Act and the Race Towards Information Acquisition Antonio Gargano, Alberto G. Rossi and Russ R. Wermers
We document a previously unknown source of information exploited by sophisticated institutional investors: the Freedom of Information Act, a law that allows for the full or partial disclosure of previously unreleased information and documents controlled by the United States government. Through our own FOIA requests we uncover the identities of several large institutional investors, chiefly hedge funds, that routinely request value-relevant information to the Food and Drug Administration. We first provide a detailed analysis of how FOIA requests are generated, the kind of information commonly requested by institutional investors and its costs. We then document that the target of FOIA requests are large firms that experience periods of low profitability and high stock price volatility. Finally, we show that FOIA requests allow institutional investors to generate abnormal portfolio returns and provide evidence suggesting that the FOIA information is not systematically known to other investors in the marketplace.
Empirical Corporate Finance: The Long and the Short Run of It
Managerial Myopia and Debt Maturity Indraneel Chakraborty, Andrew MacKinlay and William F. Maxwell
We argue that firms with relatively shorter term debt face higher managerial myopia. Because shorter term debt is less sensitive to the firm's long-term performance, short-term debtholders have less incentive to
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monitor the firm management regarding myopic investments. Myopic versus long-term investments affect the value of the firm differently at different horizons, and ultimately the firm's short-term and long-term equity returns. We use a generated instrumental variables approach to distinguish the fraction of debt maturity reduction due to investor preference and not firm preference. Ceteris paribus, at the mean issuance debt maturity of almost 10 years, we find that for a one year reduction in debt maturity due to investor preference, five-year equity returns fall by about 2:1% per annum. The benefits of monitoring by debtholders can be quite significant for equityholders.
Do Long-Term Investors Improve Corporate Decision Making? Jarrad Harford, Ambrus Kecskes and Sattar Mansi
We study the effect of investor horizons on a comprehensive set of corporate decisions. Long-term investors have the means and motive to monitor corporate managers, which generates corporate decisions that are consistent with shareholder value maximization. We find that long-term investors restrain numerous corporate misbehaviors such as earnings management and financial fraud and strengthen internal governance. They discourage a range of investment and financing activities but encourage payouts. Shareholders benefit through higher stock returns, greater profitability, and lower risk. Firms diversify their operations. We use a popular identification strategy to establish causality of our results.
Market Microstructure
High Frequency Trading and the 2008 Short Sale Ban Johnathan Brogaard, Terrence Hendershott and Ryan Riordan
We examine the effects of high frequency traders (HFTs) on liquidity and price efficiency using the September 2008 short sale ban. To disentangle the separate impacts of short selling by HFTs and non-HFTs (nHFTs) we use an instrumental variables approach exploiting differences in the ban's cross-sectional impact on HFTs and nHFTs. nHFTs’ short selling improves liquidity and price efficiency, as measured by bid-ask spreads and pricing errors. HFTs’ short selling has the opposite effect by decreasing liquidity and price efficiency. HFTs’ negative impact is driven by liquidity demanding trades. HFTs’ liquidity supply improves liquidity and price efficiency, but not enough to outweigh the negative HFT liquidity demand effect.
Shades of Darkness: A Pecking Order of Trading Venues Albert J. Menkveld, Bart Z. Yueshen and Haoxiang Zhu
Investors trade in various types of venues. When demanding immediacy they face a basic tradeoff between price impact and execution uncertainty. Venues can be sorted accordingly along a “pecking order,” with mid-point dark pools and lit markets at the top and bottom, and non-midpoint pools in the middle. A simple model formalizes this pecking order hypothesis. We test it using a unique dataset that disaggregates U.S. dark trading into various categories. A higher VIX or larger earnings surprise tilts trading volumes from the top of the pecking order to the bottom, confirming the hypothesis.
Special Session: Overreacting to Nonsynchronous Data-snooping
Is Aggregate Idiosyncratic Risk Priced? Follow the Bid-Ask Bounce David A. Lesmond and Yihua Zhao
This paper models a market microstructure bias, driven by the bid-ask spread, that is evident in the pricing of aggregate firm-level risk embodied by the stock return variance estimates of Goyal and Santa-Clara (2003). Controlling for this bias, we find no pricing ability for aggregate firm-level variance for the period 1927 to 2012 or for any sub-period tested. Market microstructure also explains the time-trend of aggregate firm-level volatility observed from 1962 to 1997 (Campbell, Lettau, Malkiel, and Xu, 2001), and subsumes any relation between retail trading and future idiosyncratic volatility from 1983 to 1999 (Brandt, Brav,
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Graham, and Kumar, 2010). We conclude that the aggregate firm-level bid-ask spread is priced with future market returns rather than any of the aggregate firm-level risk measures.
Asset Pricing with Index Investing Georgy Chabakauri and Oleg Rytchkov
We provide a novel theoretical analysis of how index investing affects capital market equilibrium. We consider a dynamic exchange economy with heterogeneous investors and two Lucas trees and find that indexing can either increase or decrease the correlation between stock returns and in general increases (decreases) volatilities and betas of stocks with larger (smaller) market capitalizations. Indexing also decreases market volatility and interest rates, although those effects are weak. The impact of index investing is particularly strong when stocks have heterogeneous fundamentals. Our results highlight that indexing changes not only how investors can trade but also their incentives to trade.
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MAP & TRANSPORTATION
From the Melbourne airport to the hotels in the city, it takes 20-30 minutes, which might vary depending on the traffic. You can either take a taxi (fare: $50-60) or SkyBus (fare: $18 for one way/$30 for return). On arrival at Southern Cross Station in the city, SkyBus provides a complimentary hotel transfer service, subject to availability (visit www.skybus.com.au for details).
For your transportation needs within the city area, we highly recommend the public transit system in Melbourne. There is a free tram zone in the Melbourne CBD – refer map below. For travel outside this zone you must purchase a "Myki" pass which allows travel on trams, busses, and trains. The Public transit is effective and as safe as can be reasonably expected.
↑ To Melb Zoo - 2.8kms
Welcome Reception, Thursday 5th March 5:00pm – 7:00pm Melbourne Zoo, Rainforest Room Elliott Avenue, Parkville, Tram 55 to Melbourne Zoo
Conference Sessions, Friday 6th March 9:30am – 7:45pm Melbourne Cricket Ground, Premiership Club & Jack Ryder Rooms Gate 6A, Brunton Ave, Melbourne, Tram 70 to MCG
Conference Special Session, Saturday 7th March 9:00am – 1:00pm The University of Melbourne Copland Theatre (Basement), The Spot Building 198 Berkeley St, Parkville, Tram 19 or 59 to Haymarket
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FRIDAY MELBOURNE CRICKET GROUND GUIDED TOUR
The Melbourne Cricket Ground http://www.mcg.org.au/ was built in 1853 and, since then, has established a marvellous history that compares favourably with any other in the world. Known colloquially as the ‘G, Australia’s favourite stadium is the birthplace of Test cricket and the home of Australian football, holding more than 80 events annually and boasting a capacity of 100,024.
The MCG guided tour gives the opportunity to relive great sporting memories through a comprehensive tour of this marvellous stadium.
MCG TOUR FEATURES
The Ponsford Stand MCC Members Reserve MCG Tapestry Players' change rooms Long Room MCC Library Media facilities A walk on the arena
SATURDAY YARRA VALLEY WINE TOUR & DINNER
The Yarra Valley has the enviable reputation as one of the world's great food and wine regions. From architectural statements to rustic tin sheds hidden among the vines, the Yarra Valley has a wonderful range of cellar doors, all reflecting the diversity of styles and approaches in this beautiful, cool-climate region. Sample the grapes and marvel at the harmony of diverse soils, temperate weather, and the dedication of generations of vignerons in the pioneering region that kick-started Victoria's wine industry in 1838. http://www.wineyarravalley.com/
Groups of up to 10 people will tour the Yarra Valley in small coaches, departing 1:00pm Saturday 7th March and returning 9:00pm. Each group will visit two wineries from the selection below and indulge their sweet side at the Chocolaterie & Ice Creamery. The day will conclude with the official FDU conference dinner and award presentations at De Bortoli Estate.
Balgownie http://www.balgownieestate.com.au/ Balgownie Estate is set amongst the undulating green landscape on 30 hectares surrounded by vineyards and breathtakingly beautiful views which are accentuated by the striking geometry of corridors of grape vines. The extensive wine tasting range includes some of our award winning
wines as well as our flagship Estate Cabernet Sauvignon and Estate Shiraz from our original 40 year old vines in Bendigo.
Domaine Chandon http://www.domainechandon.com.au/ Domaine Chandon was established by French champagne house Moët & Chandon in 1986 and is dedicated to the production of méthode traditionnelle sparkling wine and premium quality, cool-
climate still wines.
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Rochford Wines http://www.rochfordwines.com.au/ Winemaker Marc Lunt produces high quality wines with fruit sourced from our vineyards, located
in two of Victoria’s premium cool climate wine regions. Marc works to ensure that the vineyards in the Macedon Ranges and the Yarra Valley produce only the finest of grapes to be used in the
making of our wines.
Tarrawarra Estate http://www.tarrawarra.com.au/ Under the watchful eye of winemaker Clare Halloran, all of TarraWarra’s wines are meticulously
grown, hand picked, vinified and aged on the estate. TarraWarra Estate is best known as a producer of exceptional Pinot Noir and Chardonnay and we also make several other single block
heritage varietals and estate blends.
Yering Station http://www.yering.com/ Yering Station was originally established in 1838 as Victoria's first vineyard and today, this family owned Winery Tourism Complex is reaching new heights. Beyond the manicured gardens lies the
contemporary stone edifice where you can taste the full range of the estate's award-winning wines, Barak's Bridge, Yering Station and Yarra Edge, along with the critically acclaimed traditional
method, Yarrabank.
Yarra Valley Chocolaterie & Ice Creamery http://www.yvci.com.au/ Delight in the experience of tasting, seeing and indulging in quality products in our spectacular showroom and café nestled amongst sweeping valley vistas. Ice creams and decadent sweet
treats await in our café while our expansive lawns, orchard and sculptures are the perfect place to explore.
Conference Dinner
De Bortoli Yarra Valley Estate http://debortoliyarra.com.au/
De Bortoli Wines Yarra Valley Estate was established in 1989 by the De Bortoli family. The estate is managed by third generation Leanne De Bortoli and her husband, De Bortoli Chief Winemaker
Steve Webber. Together they have built a successful estate based on the family traditions of warm hospitality and a passion for creating interesting and delicious wine and food. At the Estate they have some of the oldest plantings in the Yarra Valley region. These carefully cultivated vines are
handled with care and each year continue to produce exceptional quality fruit and a range of wines to suit every palate and every pocket.
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PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Tim Adam Humboldt University
Ron Giammarino University of British Colombia
Phong Ngo Australian National University
Renée B. Adams University of New South Wales
Stefano Giglio University of Chicago
Oyvind Norli BI Norwegian Business School
Sumit Agarwal National University of Singapore
Luis Filipe Goncalves-Pinto National University of Singapore
Kjell G. Nyborg University of Zürich
Vikas Agarwal Georgia State University
Todd A. Gormley University of Pennsylvania
Maureen O’Hara Cornell University
Reena Aggarwal Georgetwon University
Vidhan K. Goyal HKUST
Micah S. Officer Loyola Marymount University
Anup Agrawal University of Alabama
Roberto C. Gutierrez University of Oregon
Emilio Osambela Carnegie Mellon University
Heitor Almeida University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Allaudeen Hameed National University of Singapore
Marco Pagano University of Napoli Federico II
George O. Aragon Arizona State University
Kathleen Hanley University of Maryland
Dimitris Papanikolaou Northwestern University
Illona Babenko Arizona State University
Andrew Hertzberg Columbia University
Andrew Patton Duke University
Kerry Back Rice University
Christian Heyerdahl-Larsen London Business School
Bradley S. Paye University of Georgia
Gurdip Bakshi University of Maryland
Nicholas Hirschey London Business School
Neil Pearson University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Pierluigi Balduzzi Boston College
Burton Hollifield Carnegie Mellon University
Kim Peijnenberg Bocconi University
Thomas W. Bates Arizona State University
Edith S. Hotchkiss Boston College
Francisco Perez-Gonzalez Stanford University
Robert Battalio University of Notre Dame
David A. Hsieh Duke University
Ludovic Phalippou Oxford University
Gregory Bauer Bank of Canada
Eric Hughson Claremont McKenna College
Gordon M. Phillips University of Southern California
Simon Benninga Tel Aviv University
Zoran Ivković Michigan State University
Christopher Polk London School of Economics
Antje Berndt North Carolina State University
Kris Jacobs University of Houston
Jeffrey E. Pontiff Boston College
Gennaro Bernile Singapore Management University
Shane A. Johnson Texas A&M University
Uday Rajan University of Michigan
Utpal Bhattacharya Indiana University
Jennifer L. Juergens Drexel University
David Reeb National University of Singapore
Audra L. Boone Texas A&M University
Brandon Julio London Business School
Jay Ritter University of Florida
Peter L. Bossaerts California Institute of Technology
Marcin T. Kacperczyk New York University
Jörg Rocholl European School of Management and Technology
Jonathan Brogaard University of Washington
Charles Kahn University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Harley E. (Chip) Ryan Jr. Georgia State University
Stephen J. Brown New York University
Patrick Kelly New Economic School Moscow
Stefano Sacchetto Carnegie Mellon University
Max Bruche City University London
Ralph Koijen London Business School
Ravindra Sastry Southern Mothodist University
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Sabrina Buti University of Toronto
Robert A. Korajczyk Northwestern University
Astrid Schornick INSEAD
Murillo Campello Cornell University
Arthur Korteweg University of Southern California
Norman Schürhoff Université de Lausanne
Jerry Cao Singapore Management University
David Lando Copenhagen Business School
Ivan Shaliastovich University of Pennsylvania
Indraneel Chakraborty Southern Methodist University
Anh Le University of North Carolina
Kelly Shue University of Chicago
Susan Christoffersen University of Toronto
Laura Lindsey Arizona State University
Clemens Sialm The University of Texas at Austin
Lauren H. Cohen Harvard Business School
Juhani Linnainmaa University of Chicago
Stephan Siegel University of Washington
Carole Comerton-Forde University of Melbourne
Hong Liu Washington University St Louis
Tom M. Smith University of Queensland
Jennifer Conrad UNC Chapel Hill
Laura Xiaolei Liu HKUST
Denis Sosyura University of Michigan
Martin Cremers University of Notre Dame
Richard Lowery The University of Texas at Austin
Heather Tookes Yale University
Sudipto Dasgupta HKUST
Michelle B. Lowry The Pennsylvania State University
Yuri Tserlukevich Arizona State University
Stephen G. Dimmock Nanyang Technological University
Christian T. Lundblad UNC Chapel Hill
Garry J. Twite University of Melbourne
Amy Dittmar University of Michigan
Peter Mackay HKUST
Patrick Verwijmeren VU University Amsterdam
Ran Duchin University of Washington
Andrew MacKinlay Southern Methodist University
Mitch Warachka Claremont McKenna College
B. Espen Eckbo Dartmouth College
Craig MacKinlay University of Pennsylvania
Scott J. Weisbenner University of Illinois
Roger Edelen University of California Davis
Igor Makarov London School of Economics
Russ Wermers University of Maryland
Andrew Ellul Indiana University
Max Maksimovic Maryland University
Bill Wilhelm University of Virginia
Daniel Ferreira London School of Economics
Spencer Martin University of Melbourne
Youchang Wu University of Wisconsin
Eliezer M. Fich Drexel University
Christoph Merkle University of Mannheim
David Yermack New York University
Fangjian Fu Singapore Management University
Alexander Michaelides Imperial College
Fernando Zapatero University of Southern California
Paolo Fulghieri UNC Chapel Hill
Roni Michaely Cornell University
Joe Zhang Singapore Management University
Michael F. Gallmeyer University of Virginia
Todd T. Milbourn Washington University St Louis
Guofu Zhou Washington University St Louis
Simon Gervais Duke University
Erwan Morellec Swiss Finance Institute
Haoxiang Zhu Massachusettes Institute of Technoligy
Vikram Nanda Georgia Institute of Technology
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Notes
CONTACT
Conference AdministratorsAnnMaree Murray and Silvia Barberoglou Department of FinanceFaculty of Business and EconomicsThe University of MelbourneParkville, VIC 3010, AUSTRALIAT: +61 3 8344 3538 | F: +61 3 8344 [email protected] http://fbe.unimelb.edu.au/finance/fdu
Organizing Committee: Neal Galpin, Vincent Grégoire,Bruce D.Grundy and Hae Won (Henny) Jung