Three essays on corporate finance

My thesis covers three critical aspects of corporate finance, including the initial return of an initial public offering, the impact of employment protection on municipal financing, and the risk-mitigating benefit of passive institutional investors. In Chapter 1, we examine whether the presence of...

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Main Author: Zhang, Quan
Other Authors: Jun-koo Kang
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165840
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1658402024-01-12T10:16:17Z Three essays on corporate finance Zhang, Quan Jun-koo Kang Nanyang Business School jkkang@ntu.edu.sg Business::Finance::Corporate finance My thesis covers three critical aspects of corporate finance, including the initial return of an initial public offering, the impact of employment protection on municipal financing, and the risk-mitigating benefit of passive institutional investors. In Chapter 1, we examine whether the presence of a minority CEO affects a firm’s IPO outcomes. We find a stylized fact that minority-helmed companies experience higher initial returns, upward price revisions, and post-IPO stock return volatility. Excessive IPO underpricing with minority CEOs can attract subscription from heterogeneous investors and correspond to the uncertainty surrounding the valuation of firms. The evidence in this paper conforms with the uncertainty models and book building models of IPO underpricing. The higher cost for going public, however, is not associated with the difference in post-IPO firm performance and auxiliary services. In Chapter 2, I exploit the adoption of U.S. state-level employment protection laws to examine whether employment protection affects municipal bond financing. I find that employment protection raises the issuance yield of municipal bonds. The results are more evident when the state unemployment rate is high, when bonds are callable, and when bonds are issued in high tax privilege states. While the bond issuance cost increases, employment protection benefits the credit rating of municipalities. In state-level analysis, I find a marginal decrease in governments’ municipal bond issuance and significant increase in public safety expenditure with the adoption of employment protection laws, suggesting that state governments support incumbent employees with more spending and financing. Chapter 3 investigates the effect of passive institutional shareholders on loan contract terms. Banks charge lower loan spreads and require less collateral for firms with higher passive institutional ownership. Moreover, the lead arranger of syndication holds less loan portion of firms with higher passive institutional ownership. The results are attenuated when firms are larger, have more analyst following, and pay higher dividends. The results are robust to using alternative measures of passive institution ownership. The results are also robust to using annual Russell Index reconstitutions as an exogenous shock to passive institutional ownerships. The results suggest that the monitoring role of passive institutional investors is beneficial for debtholders. Doctor of Philosophy 2023-04-12T01:56:12Z 2023-04-12T01:56:12Z 2023 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Zhang, Q. (2023). Three essays on corporate finance. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165840 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165840 10.32657/10356/165840 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Finance::Corporate finance
spellingShingle Business::Finance::Corporate finance
Zhang, Quan
Three essays on corporate finance
description My thesis covers three critical aspects of corporate finance, including the initial return of an initial public offering, the impact of employment protection on municipal financing, and the risk-mitigating benefit of passive institutional investors. In Chapter 1, we examine whether the presence of a minority CEO affects a firm’s IPO outcomes. We find a stylized fact that minority-helmed companies experience higher initial returns, upward price revisions, and post-IPO stock return volatility. Excessive IPO underpricing with minority CEOs can attract subscription from heterogeneous investors and correspond to the uncertainty surrounding the valuation of firms. The evidence in this paper conforms with the uncertainty models and book building models of IPO underpricing. The higher cost for going public, however, is not associated with the difference in post-IPO firm performance and auxiliary services. In Chapter 2, I exploit the adoption of U.S. state-level employment protection laws to examine whether employment protection affects municipal bond financing. I find that employment protection raises the issuance yield of municipal bonds. The results are more evident when the state unemployment rate is high, when bonds are callable, and when bonds are issued in high tax privilege states. While the bond issuance cost increases, employment protection benefits the credit rating of municipalities. In state-level analysis, I find a marginal decrease in governments’ municipal bond issuance and significant increase in public safety expenditure with the adoption of employment protection laws, suggesting that state governments support incumbent employees with more spending and financing. Chapter 3 investigates the effect of passive institutional shareholders on loan contract terms. Banks charge lower loan spreads and require less collateral for firms with higher passive institutional ownership. Moreover, the lead arranger of syndication holds less loan portion of firms with higher passive institutional ownership. The results are attenuated when firms are larger, have more analyst following, and pay higher dividends. The results are robust to using alternative measures of passive institution ownership. The results are also robust to using annual Russell Index reconstitutions as an exogenous shock to passive institutional ownerships. The results suggest that the monitoring role of passive institutional investors is beneficial for debtholders.
author2 Jun-koo Kang
author_facet Jun-koo Kang
Zhang, Quan
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Zhang, Quan
author_sort Zhang, Quan
title Three essays on corporate finance
title_short Three essays on corporate finance
title_full Three essays on corporate finance
title_fullStr Three essays on corporate finance
title_full_unstemmed Three essays on corporate finance
title_sort three essays on corporate finance
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165840
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