Venture capital, ownership structure, accounting standards and IPO underpricing: Evidence from Germany
In: Journal of economics and business, Band 62, Heft 6, S. 517-536
ISSN: 0148-6195
98 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Journal of economics and business, Band 62, Heft 6, S. 517-536
ISSN: 0148-6195
SSRN
SSRN
In: FINANA-D-23-00158
SSRN
In: 23-484
SSRN
In: Journal of Financial Economics, Forthcoming
SSRN
In: The journal of financial research: the journal of the Southern Finance Association and the Southwestern Finance Association, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 493-518
ISSN: 1475-6803
AbstractWe study China's experience with price limits by comparing a period with price limits to a period without price limits. Although many prior studies document costs of price limits, we show benefits of price limits. We find that price limits can facilitate price discovery, moderate transitory volatility, and mitigate abnormal trading activity. A tighter price limit for poorly performing stocks can also moderate volatility. We do not find evidence of a magnet effect, which suggests that prices gravitate to limit prices. Finally, we find evidence that price limits can facilitate market recovery following crashes.
The availability of organs within the African-American population has been an on-going issue. Historically, African Americans donate organs at a much lower rate than whites. Thus, this study was designed to compare general attitudes between African Americans, whites, and other minorities concerning the issue of organ donation and to identify the factors that hamper African Americans from becoming organ donors. We conducted a 12-question survey of 249 African Americans, 492 whites, and a category of others defining themselves as 71 Asians, 23 Hispanics, 22 Native Americans, and 35 unknowns for a total sample of 892. Samples were taken from six United States cities. Thirty-eight percent of African Americans stated they would not donate organs, compared to 10% of whites. When asked why not, African Americans stated "personal reasons" followed by "if I am an organ donor I won't get the necessary medical attention" as their top choices. Whites chose "religious reasons" followed by "organs may be taken before I am dead" as their top choices. African Americans were more concerned with getting proper medical treatment as opposed to whites, who worried their organs might be taken before their death. Regarding family discussion pertaining to organ donation, 66% of African Americans stated no discussion. Whites had a 46% rate for no family discussion. Regarding trust of doctors, 46% of African Americans expressed lack of trust for doctors, with 23% of whites expressing lack of trust for doctors. The results of this study point to the areas that must be given more focus by African-American health care providers and educators.
BASE
SSRN
In: The quarterly review of economics and finance, Band 79, S. 198-209
ISSN: 1062-9769
With the wide application of Big Data, Artificial Intelligence and Internet of Things in geographic information technology and industry, geospatial big data arises at the historic moment. In addition to the traditional "5V" characteristics of big data, which are Volume, Velocity, Variety, Veracity and Valuable, geospatial big data also has the characteristics of "Location Attribute". At present, the study of geospatial big data are mainly concentrated in: knowledge mining and discovery of geospatial data, Spatiotemporal big data mining, the impact of geospatial big data on visualization, social perception and smart city, geospatial big data services for government decision-making support four aspects. Based on the connotation and extension of geospatial big data, this paper comprehensively defines geospatial big data comprehensively. The application of geospatial big data in location visualization, industrial thematic geographic information comprehensive service and geographic data science and knowledge service is introduced in detail. Furthermore, the key technologies and design indicators of the National Geospatial Big Data Platform are elaborated from the perspectives of infrastructure, functional requirements and non-functional requirements, and the design and application of the National Geospatial Public Service Big Data Platform are illustrated. The challenges and opportunities of geospatial big data are discussed from the perspectives of open resource sharing, management decision support and data security. Finally, the development trend and direction of geospatial big data are summarized and prospected, so as to build a high-quality geospatial big data platform and play a greater role in social public application services and administrative management decision-making.
BASE
The single-particle properties of Mg29 have been investigated via a measurement of the Mg28(d,p)Mg29 reaction, in inverse kinematics, using the ISOLDE Solenoidal Spectrometer. The negative-parity intruder states from the fp shell have been identified and used to benchmark modern shell-model calculations. The systematic data on the single-particle centroids along the N=17 isotones show good agreement with shell-model predictions in describing the observed trends from stability toward O25. However, there is also evidence that the effect of the finite geometry of the nuclear potential is playing a role on the behavior of the p orbitals near the particle-emission threshold. ; This work wassupported by the U.K. Science and Technology Facilities Council [Grants No. ST/P004598/1, No. ST/N002563/1, No. ST/M00161X/1 (Liverpool), No. ST/P004423/1 (Manchester), No. ST/P005314/1 (Surrey), the ISOL-SRS Grant (Daresbury), No. ST/R004056/1 (Ernest Rutherford Fellowship - Gaffney), and No. ST/T004797/1 (Ernest Rutherford Fellowship - Sharp)], the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contracts No. DE-AC02-06CH11357 (ANL) and No. DE-SC-0014552 (UConn), the European Union's Horizon 2020 Framework research and innovation program under Grant Agreement No. 654002 (ENSAR2), the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 665779, the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO, Belgium), the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC Grant Agreement No. 617156, and the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation under Grants No. PGC2018-095640- B-I00"ELEGANT" and No. PID2019-104390GB-I00. This research used targets provided by the Center for Accelerator Target Science at Argonne National Laboratory. The FSU shell-model calculations were performed using the computational facility of the nuclear physics theory group, Florida State University, supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science (DE-SC-0009883 (FSU).
BASE
In: Materials & Design (1980-2015), Band 56, S. 1-8
In: Materials & Design, Band 35, S. 170-174
In: JBF-D-23-00201
SSRN