563 research outputs found
Information Sharing and Information Acqusition in Credit Markets
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may seem that the establishment of information sharing arrangements such as credit registers and bureaus will lead to lower investment in acquiring information. However, banks base their decisions on both hard and soft information, and it is only the former type of data that can be communicated credibly. We show that hard and soft information are strategic substitutes, and that when hard information is shared, banks will invest more in soft information. This can potentially lead to more accurate lending decisions and favor small, informationally opaque borrowers. Higher invest- ment in soft technology offers important implications for borrower switching. We test our theory using firm-level data from 24 countries.Bank competition;credit bureaus;hard information;soft information
A Note on Long non-Hamiltonian Cycles in One Class of Digraphs
Let be a strong digraph on vertices. In [3, Discrete Applied
Math., 95 (1999) 77-87)], J. Bang-Jensen, Y. Guo and A. Yeo proved the
following theorem: if (*) and for every pair of non-adjacent vertices
with a common in-neighbour or a common out-neighbour, then is hamiltonian.
In this note we show that: if is not directed cycle and satisfies the
condition (*), then contains a cycle of length or .Comment: 7 pages. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1207.564
Potassium l-2-nitrimino-1,3-diazepane-4-carboxylate monohydrate
The title compound, K+·C6H9N4O4
−·H2O, crystallizes with the K atoms located on special positions related by pseudocentres of symmetry. Each K atom is coordinated by six O-atom donors. The N and water H atoms are involved in inter- and intramolecular N—H⋯O, N—H⋯N and O—H⋯O hydrogen bonding. The data indicate inversion twinning
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