12 research outputs found

    The Influence of COVID-19 on Sustainable Economy

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    This book examines applied studies contributing to the issues of financial markets and sustainable economy in conditions of COVID-19 pandemic. All studies in this book applied complex models with quantitative data in the areas of finance, macro and sustainable economy, as well as business and management, to express the main issues of the financial–economic universe during the pandemic crisis. Some of the studies offer possible solutions in the sustainable post-COVID era. This book is also of particular interest in relation to the green economy during the COVID-19 pandemic

    Essays in corporate risk

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    This thesis explores the dynamic interplay between risk-taking behaviors, corporate sustainability, and corporate governance mechanisms. The first paper demonstrates a causal effect of CEO career concerns on reduced corporate risktaking using regression discontinuity design. It finds that career-concerned CEOs exhibit risk aversion, influencing corporate policies toward safer investments, higher cash reserves, and increased dividends. The second paper illustrates how CEOs facing career anxieties undertake ESG reputational risk management, compromising long-term ESG performance. The third paper shows that higher director nomination eligibility criteria causally reduce stock price crash risk, an effect amplified in non-state-owned firms with lower executive control, volatile share prices, and more retail investors. Collectively, the thesis makes academic contributions to empirical finance and offers practical insights into corporate risk management and investment risk identification for executives, policymakers, and regulators

    From Code to Capital: A Study of How Emerging Technologies Shape Stock Markets

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    [eng] Recent white papers have described how emerging technologies will shape the future (World Economic Forum, 2017) and how institutions are responding to the increasingly salient trend (EU Commission, 2021). From an investment perspective, emerging technology offers major potential for growth, but also entails considerable uncertainty and risk, as these technologies are just beginning to exist, grow and develop (Cambridge, 2023). By nature, these can be associated to uncertainty since the final stages of their development, market acceptation and impact, indeed, are uncertain. Mishkin (2016) posits that stock prices reflect optimal expected forecasts based on available information. Expectations regarding future profits from emerging technology are thus embedded in current stock prices. Evidence shows that disruptive technology firms exhibit unjustifiably high stock returns and volatility (Pástor and Veronesi, 2006; Gharbi, Sahut, and Teulon, 2014; Schwert, 2002), suggesting bubble-like patterns driven by market irrationality (Shiller, 2000; Pérez, 2003). This thesis delves into the intersection of technology and finance, focusing on how emerging technologies shape the landscape of financial assets risks and returns dynamics and to encourage investors and analysts to use emerging technologies strategically to engage with market return and volatility. This thesis is a self-contained scientific document composed of six chapters, and each one entails certain particularities regarding the research approach and methodology. The thesis begins with an Introduction. Chapter 2, entitled “The Rubik’s Cube of Emerging Technologies and Stock Volatility” presents a systematic review of the literature on the constellation of emerging technologies and asset return volatility, documenting several potential explanations for how emerging technologies drive stock volatility. Several specific features of emerging technologies are identified across the literature review, which are described as diffusive, persistent, heterogeneous, and momentum-oriented. The main conclusion of this chapter is that emerging technologies systemically contributes to an increased stock return volatility driven by their inherent uncertain nature, the greater complexity to calculate fundamental values, over-enthusiastic and novice investors, and their idiosyncratic properties. The review of recent empirical evidence contributes to the technological innovation, economic and finance literature by providing a state of the art of the relationship between emerging technologies and asset returns and asset return volatility. Chapter 3, entitled “Regime Switching in High-Tech ETFs: Idiosyncratic Volatility and Return” shows how investors’ expectations regarding emerging technologies are reflected across Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), as a particular type of financial security. A Markov regime-switching (MRS) modeling involving time series analysis has been used for this study. The main finding contributes to the idiosyncratic risk literature by showcasing a significant relationship between idiosyncratic risk and return and suggest that idiosyncratic volatility matters in high-tech ETF pricing. The evidence demonstrate that idiosyncratic risk is priced negatively or positively depending on volatility regimes. The main contribution is toward diversification strategy for investments in the high-tech sector, idiosyncratic risk can play an important role in terms of managing idiosyncratic volatility and return. Chapter 4, entitled “Impact of emerging technologies in banking and finance in Europe: A volatility spillover and contagion approach”, investigates the time series properties of the correlations, volatility cluster, spillover, and persistence for asset returns and emerging technology-related assets across the Spanish Banking sector, the Spanish Market, and the finance industry in the European Union. The main findings show that developments in emerging technology are a relevant factor for capturing the level of risk and volatility and that emerging technology-related assets are highly integrated. The findings shed light on the importance of considering sector, industry, and market specific features that need to be contemplated and can result in heterogeneous insights into the relationship between emerging technology and assets risk and returns. The contribution of this study is a more in-depth analysis of opportunities and challenges related to FinTech and the banking industry in the past, present, and future. Chapter 5, “The impact of disruptive technologies on Spanish banking under different volatility regimes”, contributes to the innovation and finance literature and explores whether and how disruptive technology impacts banking stock returns under high volatility and low volatility regimes. A classical CAPM was adapted into a two-factor model with heteroscedastic Markov switching regimes. Using the Spanish banking sector the results indicate that disruptive technologies have an impact on Spanish banking stock returns and that the effects are volatility regime dependent. Additionally, we found that intensity depends also on the existing market circumstances, having a more significant influence under unfavorable market conditions and less influence under stable ones. These findings suggest that investors are informed about and acknowledge the advantages of disruptive technologies and will use their adoption as a business strategy to offset adverse market circumstances. Chapter 6, “Banking FinTech and stock market volatility? The BIZUM case”, reviews whether and how the adoption of FinTech by incumbent banks affects their stock price volatility. Using the case of BIZUM, a FinTech solution, the effect on Spanish incumbent banks has been analyzed by applying a GARCH-M GED methodology. The results indicates that investors are not indifferent to the adoption of a disruptive technology, driving to a reduction in the incumbent banks stock volatility. One might suspect investors to have anchored the benefits and competitive advantages that FinTech might offer for the incumbents, being in line with the theoretical argument proposed by Jun and Yeo (2016) that FinTech will complement incumbent banks and lead to positive impact. To sum up, this thesis provides a number of contributions to the fields of financial economics and innovation. First, it investigates and presents evidence on a significant relationship between emerging technologies and stock market dynamics. Second, it provides evidence that the impact of emerging technologies on the stock market varies depending on the stock market conditions. Third, it shows that the intensity of the impact also depends on the market circumstances reflected through volatility regimes. Moreover, and fourth, we found that emerging technologies are providing new market opportunities, which entail novel volatility patterns. However, the results also highlight that the impact of emerging technology on market dynamics varies across security types, industries, sectors, and country levels. Therefore, a case-by-case approach is paramount. Further studies are necessary to formulate a generalized statement. In summary, emerging technologies reshape stock markets, impacting volatility levels. Researchers and practitioners must navigate this dynamic landscape to make informed decisions

    Commodity price volatility, stock market performance and economic growth: evidence from BRICS countries

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    Abstracts in English, Afrikaans and ZuluThe study investigated the nexus between commodity price volatility, stock market performance, and economic growth in the emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (the BRICS) predicated on two hypotheses. First, the study hypothesised that in modern integrated financial systems, commodity price volatility predisposes stock market performance to be non-linearly related to economic growth. The second hypothesis was that financial crises are an inescapable feature of modern financial systems. The study used daily data on stock indices and selected commodity prices as well as monthly data on national output proxies and stock indices. The study analysed data for non-linearities, fractality, and entropy behaviour using the spectral causality approach, univariate GARCH, EGARCH, FIGARCH, DCC-GARCH, and Markov Regime Switching (MRS) – GARCH. The four main findings were: first, spectral causality tests signalled dynamic non-linearities in the relationship between the three commodity futures prices and the BRICS stock indices. Second, the predominantly non-linear relationship between commodity prices and stock prices was reflected in the nexus between the national output proxies and the indices of the five main commodity classes. Third, spectral causality analysis revealed that the causal structures between commodity prices and national output proxies were non-linear and dynamic. Fourth, the Nyblom parameter stability tests revealed evidence of structural breaks in the data that was analysed. The DCC-GARCH model uncovered strong evidence of contagion, spillovers, and interdependence. The study added to the body of knowledge in three ways. First, micro and macro levels of commodity price changes were linked with corresponding stock market performance indicator changes. Second, unlike earlier studies on the commodity price – stock market performance – economic growth nexus, the study employed spectral causality analysis, single - regime GARCH analysis, Dynamic Conditional Correlation (DCC) – GARCH and a two-step Markov – Regime – Switching – GARCH as a unified analytical approach. Third, spectral causality graphs depicting relationships between stock indices and national output proxies revealed benign business cycle effects, thus, contributing to broadening the scope of business cycle theoryBusiness ManagementPhD. (Management Studies

    Factors Influencing Customer Satisfaction towards E-shopping in Malaysia

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    Online shopping or e-shopping has changed the world of business and quite a few people have decided to work with these features. What their primary concerns precisely and the responses from the globalisation are the competency of incorporation while doing their businesses. E-shopping has also increased substantially in Malaysia in recent years. The rapid increase in the e-commerce industry in Malaysia has created the demand to emphasize on how to increase customer satisfaction while operating in the e-retailing environment. It is very important that customers are satisfied with the website, or else, they would not return. Therefore, a crucial fact to look into is that companies must ensure that their customers are satisfied with their purchases that are really essential from the ecommerce’s point of view. With is in mind, this study aimed at investigating customer satisfaction towards e-shopping in Malaysia. A total of 400 questionnaires were distributed among students randomly selected from various public and private universities located within Klang valley area. Total 369 questionnaires were returned, out of which 341 questionnaires were found usable for further analysis. Finally, SEM was employed to test the hypotheses. This study found that customer satisfaction towards e-shopping in Malaysia is to a great extent influenced by ease of use, trust, design of the website, online security and e-service quality. Finally, recommendations and future study direction is provided. Keywords: E-shopping, Customer satisfaction, Trust, Online security, E-service quality, Malaysia

    Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences & Humanities

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