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Firms often register trademarks as they launch new products or services. We find that the number of new trademark registrations positively predicts firm profitability, stock returns, and underreaction by analysts in their earnings forecasts. Using the Federal Trademark Dilution Act (FTDA) as an...
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This paper addresses the scheduling of turnaround operations for flights in civil airports. A series of complex issues, including the heterogeneity of flights and operators, resource constraints on turnaround operations, temporal restrictions and alternative service patterns of turnaround...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014559062
We theoretically and empirically analyze information generation by stock markets on economic prospects of innovations and the resultant feedback effect on firm-level innovation-related investment (IRI). By modeling the unique aspects of firm-specific and systematic drivers of innovation profits,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012922031
Q-theory predicts that investment frictions steepen the relation between expected returns and firm investment. Using financing constraints to proxy for investment frictions, we document only weak evidence that the investment-to-assets and asset growth effects in the cross-section of returns are...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013133882
Fully expensing intangible investments has potential distorting effects on factor investing based on book-to-market, investment, and profitability. Incorporating intangible investment/capital into the conceptual frameworks and empirical factor models of Fama and French (1993, 2015) and Hou, Xue...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013245197
In a frictionless world, investment is perfectly elastic to changes in the discount rate. With financial frictions, investment is less elastic, meaning that a given magnitude of change in investment is associated with a higher magnitude of change in the discount rate. Equivalently, investment is...
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