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Using branch-level data on public and private U.S. banking institutions we investigate the importance of branch religiosity in shaping bank risk-taking behavior. Our results show robust evidence that branch religiosity is negatively related to bank risk-taking. This effect persists after...
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We examine the relationship between equity risk and the use of financial derivatives with a sample of 555 banks from eighteen developed markets from 2006 to 2015. Our main findings suggest that banks' use of financial derivatives increased their risk. This increase in risk can be driven by...
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The paper investigates the role of CEO risk incentives in increasing the riskiness of securitization transactions in the financial industry. Using a sample of US financial institutions, and a system model to account for the endogeneity problem between risk incentives and securitization, we...
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Standards and conceptual issues -- Fair value and the conceptual framework -- Fair value accounting : a standard setting perspective -- Have the standard setters gone too far, or not far enough, with fair value accounting? -- Shareholder value, financialization and accounting regulation : making...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011798262
This paper examines the relation between the investment horizon of banks and their CEO compensation, and its consequences for risk and performance. We find that banks with short-term investment intensity pay more cash bonus, exhibit higher risk and perform more poorly than banks with longer-term...
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