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Corruption and fraud in financial markets : malpractice, misconduct and manipulation / / Carol Alexander, Douglas Cumming
Corruption and fraud in financial markets : malpractice, misconduct and manipulation / / Carol Alexander, Douglas Cumming
Autore Alexander Carol (Economist)
Pubbl/distr/stampa England : , : Wiley, , [2020]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (626 pages)
Disciplina 364.168
Soggetto topico Commercial crimes
ISBN 1-394-17814-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- About the Editors -- List of Contributors -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Part I What are Manipulation and Fraud and why do They matter? -- Chapter 2: An Overview of Market Manipulation -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Definitions of Market Manipulation -- 2.2.1 Legal Interpretation and Provisions against Market Manipulation -- 2.2.2 Economics and Legal Studies Perspective -- 2.3 A Taxonomy of the Types of Market Manipulation -- 2.3.1 Categories of Market Manipulation -- 2.3.2 Market Manipulation Techniques -- 2.4 Research on Market Manipulation -- 2.4.1 Theoretical Literature -- 2.4.2 Empirical Literature -- 2.4.3 Conclusions from the Research on Market Manipulation -- 2.5 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3: A Taxonomy of Financial Market Misconduct -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Challenges in Research on Financial Market Misconduct -- 3.3 Defining Financial Market Misconduct -- 3.3.1 Price Manipulation -- 3.3.2 Circular Trading -- 3.3.3 Collusion and Information Sharing -- 3.3.4 Inside Information -- 3.3.5 Reference Price Influence -- 3.3.6 Improper Order Handling -- 3.3.7 Misleading Customers -- 3.4 Defining Financial Fraud -- 3.4.1 Credit Card Fraud -- 3.4.2 Money Laundering -- 3.4.3 Financial Statement Fraud -- 3.4.4 Computer Intrusion Fraud -- 3.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Financial Misconduct and Market-Based Penalties -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Notable Cases of Financial Reporting Fraud -- 4.3 Financial Reporting Misconduct and Legal Redress -- 4.4 Evolution of US Financial Regulations -- 4.4.1 Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (1995) -- 4.4.2 Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) -- 4.4.3 Dodd-Frank Act (2010) -- 4.5 Legal versus Market-Based Penalties for Financial Misconduct -- 4.5.1 Common Forms of Legal Penalties.
4.5.2 Role of Market-Based Penalties -- 4.6 Firm-Level Penalties for Corporate Financial Misconduct -- 4.6.1 Direct Economic Costs Captured in Loss of Market Value -- 4.6.2 Loss of Firm Reputation -- 4.6.3 Spillover of Reputational Effect -- 4.6.4 Governance Risk and Insurance Premiums -- 4.6.5 Reduced Liquidity -- 4.6.6 Access to Financing -- 4.6.7 Reduced Innovation -- 4.6.8 Mergers and Acquisitions -- 4.7 Individual-Level Penalties for Corporate Financial Misconduct -- 4.7.1 Executive and Director Turnover -- 4.7.2 Impaired Career Progression -- 4.7.3 Loss of Reputation -- 4.7.4 Executive Compensation -- 4.7.5 Strengthened Monitoring -- 4.8 Causes, Risks, and Moderators of Financial Misconduct -- 4.8.1 Fraud Incentives -- 4.8.2 Risk Factors -- 4.8.3 Public Enforcement: Regulatory and Judicial Stringency -- 4.8.4 Public Enforcement: Detection and Surveillance -- 4.8.5 Private Enforcement -- 4.9 Other Non-Financial Misconduct -- 4.10 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 5: Insider Trading and Market Manipulation -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Regulatory Framework on Insider Trading and Market Manipulation -- 5.3 Recent Examples of Market Manipulation and Insider Trading -- 5.4 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 6: Financial Fraud and Reputational Capital -- 6.1 Financial Frauds in the 2000s -- 6.2 The Effects of Fraud Revelation on Firm Value and Reputational Capital -- 6.2.1 Market Value Losses When Financial Misconduct Is Revealed -- 6.2.2 Spillover Effects -- 6.2.3 Reputational Losses for Financial Misconduct -- 6.2.4 Direct Measures of Lost Reputational Capital -- 6.2.5 Do Misconduct Firms Always Lose Reputational Capital? -- 6.2.6 Rebuilding Reputational Capital -- 6.3 The Effects of Fraud Revelation on Shareholders and Managers -- 6.3.1 Should Shareholders Pay? Do Managers Pay? -- 6.3.2 Do Shareholders Pay Twice?.
6.3.3 Are Firm-Level Penalties Efficient? -- 6.3.4 Consequences for Managers and Directors -- 6.4 Why Do Managers Do It? Motives and Constraints -- 6.4.1 Motives for Financial Misconduct -- 6.4.2 Constraints on Financial Misconduct -- 6.5 Proxies and Databases Used to Identify Samples of Financial Statement Misconduct -- 6.6 Conclusion: Reputation, Enforcement, and Culture -- References -- Part II How and Where Does Misconduct Occur? -- Chapter 7: Manipulative and Collusive Practices in FX Markets -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Different Types of FX Orders -- 7.3 The Unique FX Market Structure -- 7.4 Examples of Manipulative and Collusive Practices in FX Markets -- 7.4.1 Front Running -- 7.4.2 Triggering Stop-Loss Orders -- 7.4.3 'Banging the Close' -- 7.4.4 Collusion and Sharing of Confidential Information -- 7.4.5 Spoofing -- 7.4.6 Market Abuse via Electronic Trading Platforms -- 7.5 The Reform Process -- References -- Chapter 8: Fraud and Manipulation within Cryptocurrency Markets -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Why Do fraud and Manipulation Occur in Cryptocurrency Markets? -- 8.2.1 Lack of Consistent Regulation -- 8.2.2 Relative Anonymity -- 8.2.3 Low Barriers to Entry -- 8.2.4 Exchange Standards and Sophistication -- 8.3 Pump and Dumps -- 8.3.1 Case Studies -- 8.4 Inflated Trading Volume -- 8.4.1 Case Study: January 2017 and PBoC Involvement -- 8.5 Exchange DDoS Attacks -- 8.5.1 Case Study -- 8.6 Hacks and Exploitations -- 8.6.1 Exchange Hacks -- 8.6.2 Smart Contract Exploits -- 8.6.3 Protocol Exploitation -- 8.7 Flash Crashes -- 8.7.1 GDAX-ETH/USD Flash Crash -- 8.8 Order Book-Based Manipulations -- 8.8.1 Quote Stuffing -- 8.8.2 Order Spoofing -- 8.9 Stablecoins and Tether -- 8.9.1 Tether Historical Timeline -- 8.9.2 Tether Controversy and Criticism -- 8.9.3 Tether's Significance in Cryptocurrency Global Markets -- 8.10 Summary and Conclusions.
References -- Chapter 9: The Integrity of Closing Prices -- 9.1 Why Closing Prices Matter -- 9.2 Painting the Tape and Portfolio Pumping -- 9.3 'Bang-the-Close' Manipulation: The Response of Financial Intermediaries -- 9.4 Stock Price Pinning on Option Expiration Dates -- 9.5 Conclusion: Lessons for the Regulation and Design of Financial Markets -- References -- Chapter 10: A Trader's Perspective on Market Abuse Regulations -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Getting the Trading Edge -- 10.3 A Typical Trader's Market Window -- 10.4 Wash Trades -- 10.5 High Ticking/Low Ticking - Momentum Ignition -- 10.6 Spoofing -- 10.7 Layering -- 10.8 Smoking -- 10.9 Case Study: Paul Rotter a.k.a. 'The Flipper' -- 10.10 The Innocent and the Guilty -- 10.11 What Are Exchanges Doing to Prevent Market Abuse? -- 10.11.1 CME Group -- 10.11.2 ICE -- 10.12 What Are Trading Companies Doing to Prevent Abuse? -- 10.13 Will There Be an End to Market Abuse? -- Part III Who are These Scoundrels? -- Chapter 11: Misconduct in Banking: Governance and the Board of Directors -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Literature Review -- 11.3 Research Design -- 11.3.1 Data -- 11.3.2 Empirical Design -- 11.3.3 Variables -- 11.4 Empirical Results -- 11.4.1 Main Results -- 11.4.2 Results for Different Classes of Enforcement Actions -- 11.4.3 Does Better Board Quality Alleviate Shareholder Wealth Losses? -- 11.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12: Misconduct and Fraud by Investment Managers -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Related Research -- 12.3 The Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and Mandatory Disclosures -- 12.4 Data -- 12.4.1 Investment Fraud -- 12.4.2 Form ADV Data and Variables -- 12.5 Predicting Fraud and Misconduct -- 12.5.1 Predicting Fraud by Investment Managers -- 12.5.2 Interpreting the Predictive Content of the Models -- 12.5.3 K-Fold Cross-Validation Tests.
12.6 Predicting the Initiation vs. the Continuance of Fraud -- 12.7 Firm-Wide Fraud vs. Fraud by a Rogue Employee -- 12.8 Out-of-Sample Prediction and Model Stability -- 12.9 Policy Implications and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 13: Options Backdating and Shareholders -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Stock Return Patterns around Option Grants -- 13.3 The Backdating Practice -- 13.4 Media Coverage, Restatement, and Investigation -- 13.5 Stock Market Reaction to Public Revelations of Backdating -- 13.6 Investor Reaction to (and Anticipation of) Public Revelations -- 13.7 Other Types of Misbehaviour Related to Option Grants -- 13.7.1 Forward Dating -- 13.7.2 Selective Disclosure -- 13.7.3 Option Exercise Backdating -- 13.7.4 Independent Director Backdating -- 13.8 Connections with Questionable Practices by Corporate Executives and Other Agents -- 13.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 14: The Strategic Behaviour of Underwriters in Valuing IPOs -- 14.1 Valuing IPOs -- 14.2 The Underwriter's Incentives in the Valuation of IPOs -- 14.3 Literature Review -- 14.4 Sample, Data, and Methodology -- 14.4.1 Sample and Data -- 14.4.2 Alternative Selection Criteria of Comparable Firms -- 14.4.3 Valuation Bias and IPO Premium -- 14.5 Results -- 14.5.1 Algorithmic Selections -- 14.5.2 Affiliated and Unaffiliated Analysts -- 14.5.3 Underwriters' Selection of Comparable Firms Pre- vs. Post-IPO -- 14.5.4 Pre- vs. Post-IPO Selections and Industry Effects -- 14.6 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 15: Governance of Financial Services Outsourcing: Managing Misconduct and Third-Party Risks -- 15.1 Introduction -- 15.2 The Four Components in Outsourcing -- 15.2.1 Efficient Outsourcing -- 15.2.2 The Four-Factor Governance Model -- 15.2.3 Misconduct in Outsourcing and the Ability of Financial Institutions to Monitor.
15.3 The Interaction between Contracting and Monitoring.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910798926503321
Alexander Carol (Economist)  
England : , : Wiley, , [2020]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Corruption and fraud in financial markets : malpractice, misconduct and manipulation / / Carol Alexander, Douglas Cumming
Corruption and fraud in financial markets : malpractice, misconduct and manipulation / / Carol Alexander, Douglas Cumming
Autore Alexander Carol (Economist)
Pubbl/distr/stampa England : , : Wiley, , [2020]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (626 pages)
Disciplina 364.168
Soggetto topico Commercial crimes
ISBN 1-394-17814-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- About the Editors -- List of Contributors -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Part I What are Manipulation and Fraud and why do They matter? -- Chapter 2: An Overview of Market Manipulation -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Definitions of Market Manipulation -- 2.2.1 Legal Interpretation and Provisions against Market Manipulation -- 2.2.2 Economics and Legal Studies Perspective -- 2.3 A Taxonomy of the Types of Market Manipulation -- 2.3.1 Categories of Market Manipulation -- 2.3.2 Market Manipulation Techniques -- 2.4 Research on Market Manipulation -- 2.4.1 Theoretical Literature -- 2.4.2 Empirical Literature -- 2.4.3 Conclusions from the Research on Market Manipulation -- 2.5 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3: A Taxonomy of Financial Market Misconduct -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Challenges in Research on Financial Market Misconduct -- 3.3 Defining Financial Market Misconduct -- 3.3.1 Price Manipulation -- 3.3.2 Circular Trading -- 3.3.3 Collusion and Information Sharing -- 3.3.4 Inside Information -- 3.3.5 Reference Price Influence -- 3.3.6 Improper Order Handling -- 3.3.7 Misleading Customers -- 3.4 Defining Financial Fraud -- 3.4.1 Credit Card Fraud -- 3.4.2 Money Laundering -- 3.4.3 Financial Statement Fraud -- 3.4.4 Computer Intrusion Fraud -- 3.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Financial Misconduct and Market-Based Penalties -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Notable Cases of Financial Reporting Fraud -- 4.3 Financial Reporting Misconduct and Legal Redress -- 4.4 Evolution of US Financial Regulations -- 4.4.1 Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (1995) -- 4.4.2 Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) -- 4.4.3 Dodd-Frank Act (2010) -- 4.5 Legal versus Market-Based Penalties for Financial Misconduct -- 4.5.1 Common Forms of Legal Penalties.
4.5.2 Role of Market-Based Penalties -- 4.6 Firm-Level Penalties for Corporate Financial Misconduct -- 4.6.1 Direct Economic Costs Captured in Loss of Market Value -- 4.6.2 Loss of Firm Reputation -- 4.6.3 Spillover of Reputational Effect -- 4.6.4 Governance Risk and Insurance Premiums -- 4.6.5 Reduced Liquidity -- 4.6.6 Access to Financing -- 4.6.7 Reduced Innovation -- 4.6.8 Mergers and Acquisitions -- 4.7 Individual-Level Penalties for Corporate Financial Misconduct -- 4.7.1 Executive and Director Turnover -- 4.7.2 Impaired Career Progression -- 4.7.3 Loss of Reputation -- 4.7.4 Executive Compensation -- 4.7.5 Strengthened Monitoring -- 4.8 Causes, Risks, and Moderators of Financial Misconduct -- 4.8.1 Fraud Incentives -- 4.8.2 Risk Factors -- 4.8.3 Public Enforcement: Regulatory and Judicial Stringency -- 4.8.4 Public Enforcement: Detection and Surveillance -- 4.8.5 Private Enforcement -- 4.9 Other Non-Financial Misconduct -- 4.10 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 5: Insider Trading and Market Manipulation -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Regulatory Framework on Insider Trading and Market Manipulation -- 5.3 Recent Examples of Market Manipulation and Insider Trading -- 5.4 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 6: Financial Fraud and Reputational Capital -- 6.1 Financial Frauds in the 2000s -- 6.2 The Effects of Fraud Revelation on Firm Value and Reputational Capital -- 6.2.1 Market Value Losses When Financial Misconduct Is Revealed -- 6.2.2 Spillover Effects -- 6.2.3 Reputational Losses for Financial Misconduct -- 6.2.4 Direct Measures of Lost Reputational Capital -- 6.2.5 Do Misconduct Firms Always Lose Reputational Capital? -- 6.2.6 Rebuilding Reputational Capital -- 6.3 The Effects of Fraud Revelation on Shareholders and Managers -- 6.3.1 Should Shareholders Pay? Do Managers Pay? -- 6.3.2 Do Shareholders Pay Twice?.
6.3.3 Are Firm-Level Penalties Efficient? -- 6.3.4 Consequences for Managers and Directors -- 6.4 Why Do Managers Do It? Motives and Constraints -- 6.4.1 Motives for Financial Misconduct -- 6.4.2 Constraints on Financial Misconduct -- 6.5 Proxies and Databases Used to Identify Samples of Financial Statement Misconduct -- 6.6 Conclusion: Reputation, Enforcement, and Culture -- References -- Part II How and Where Does Misconduct Occur? -- Chapter 7: Manipulative and Collusive Practices in FX Markets -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Different Types of FX Orders -- 7.3 The Unique FX Market Structure -- 7.4 Examples of Manipulative and Collusive Practices in FX Markets -- 7.4.1 Front Running -- 7.4.2 Triggering Stop-Loss Orders -- 7.4.3 'Banging the Close' -- 7.4.4 Collusion and Sharing of Confidential Information -- 7.4.5 Spoofing -- 7.4.6 Market Abuse via Electronic Trading Platforms -- 7.5 The Reform Process -- References -- Chapter 8: Fraud and Manipulation within Cryptocurrency Markets -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Why Do fraud and Manipulation Occur in Cryptocurrency Markets? -- 8.2.1 Lack of Consistent Regulation -- 8.2.2 Relative Anonymity -- 8.2.3 Low Barriers to Entry -- 8.2.4 Exchange Standards and Sophistication -- 8.3 Pump and Dumps -- 8.3.1 Case Studies -- 8.4 Inflated Trading Volume -- 8.4.1 Case Study: January 2017 and PBoC Involvement -- 8.5 Exchange DDoS Attacks -- 8.5.1 Case Study -- 8.6 Hacks and Exploitations -- 8.6.1 Exchange Hacks -- 8.6.2 Smart Contract Exploits -- 8.6.3 Protocol Exploitation -- 8.7 Flash Crashes -- 8.7.1 GDAX-ETH/USD Flash Crash -- 8.8 Order Book-Based Manipulations -- 8.8.1 Quote Stuffing -- 8.8.2 Order Spoofing -- 8.9 Stablecoins and Tether -- 8.9.1 Tether Historical Timeline -- 8.9.2 Tether Controversy and Criticism -- 8.9.3 Tether's Significance in Cryptocurrency Global Markets -- 8.10 Summary and Conclusions.
References -- Chapter 9: The Integrity of Closing Prices -- 9.1 Why Closing Prices Matter -- 9.2 Painting the Tape and Portfolio Pumping -- 9.3 'Bang-the-Close' Manipulation: The Response of Financial Intermediaries -- 9.4 Stock Price Pinning on Option Expiration Dates -- 9.5 Conclusion: Lessons for the Regulation and Design of Financial Markets -- References -- Chapter 10: A Trader's Perspective on Market Abuse Regulations -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Getting the Trading Edge -- 10.3 A Typical Trader's Market Window -- 10.4 Wash Trades -- 10.5 High Ticking/Low Ticking - Momentum Ignition -- 10.6 Spoofing -- 10.7 Layering -- 10.8 Smoking -- 10.9 Case Study: Paul Rotter a.k.a. 'The Flipper' -- 10.10 The Innocent and the Guilty -- 10.11 What Are Exchanges Doing to Prevent Market Abuse? -- 10.11.1 CME Group -- 10.11.2 ICE -- 10.12 What Are Trading Companies Doing to Prevent Abuse? -- 10.13 Will There Be an End to Market Abuse? -- Part III Who are These Scoundrels? -- Chapter 11: Misconduct in Banking: Governance and the Board of Directors -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Literature Review -- 11.3 Research Design -- 11.3.1 Data -- 11.3.2 Empirical Design -- 11.3.3 Variables -- 11.4 Empirical Results -- 11.4.1 Main Results -- 11.4.2 Results for Different Classes of Enforcement Actions -- 11.4.3 Does Better Board Quality Alleviate Shareholder Wealth Losses? -- 11.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12: Misconduct and Fraud by Investment Managers -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Related Research -- 12.3 The Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and Mandatory Disclosures -- 12.4 Data -- 12.4.1 Investment Fraud -- 12.4.2 Form ADV Data and Variables -- 12.5 Predicting Fraud and Misconduct -- 12.5.1 Predicting Fraud by Investment Managers -- 12.5.2 Interpreting the Predictive Content of the Models -- 12.5.3 K-Fold Cross-Validation Tests.
12.6 Predicting the Initiation vs. the Continuance of Fraud -- 12.7 Firm-Wide Fraud vs. Fraud by a Rogue Employee -- 12.8 Out-of-Sample Prediction and Model Stability -- 12.9 Policy Implications and Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 13: Options Backdating and Shareholders -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Stock Return Patterns around Option Grants -- 13.3 The Backdating Practice -- 13.4 Media Coverage, Restatement, and Investigation -- 13.5 Stock Market Reaction to Public Revelations of Backdating -- 13.6 Investor Reaction to (and Anticipation of) Public Revelations -- 13.7 Other Types of Misbehaviour Related to Option Grants -- 13.7.1 Forward Dating -- 13.7.2 Selective Disclosure -- 13.7.3 Option Exercise Backdating -- 13.7.4 Independent Director Backdating -- 13.8 Connections with Questionable Practices by Corporate Executives and Other Agents -- 13.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 14: The Strategic Behaviour of Underwriters in Valuing IPOs -- 14.1 Valuing IPOs -- 14.2 The Underwriter's Incentives in the Valuation of IPOs -- 14.3 Literature Review -- 14.4 Sample, Data, and Methodology -- 14.4.1 Sample and Data -- 14.4.2 Alternative Selection Criteria of Comparable Firms -- 14.4.3 Valuation Bias and IPO Premium -- 14.5 Results -- 14.5.1 Algorithmic Selections -- 14.5.2 Affiliated and Unaffiliated Analysts -- 14.5.3 Underwriters' Selection of Comparable Firms Pre- vs. Post-IPO -- 14.5.4 Pre- vs. Post-IPO Selections and Industry Effects -- 14.6 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 15: Governance of Financial Services Outsourcing: Managing Misconduct and Third-Party Risks -- 15.1 Introduction -- 15.2 The Four Components in Outsourcing -- 15.2.1 Efficient Outsourcing -- 15.2.2 The Four-Factor Governance Model -- 15.2.3 Misconduct in Outsourcing and the Ability of Financial Institutions to Monitor.
15.3 The Interaction between Contracting and Monitoring.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910822696403321
Alexander Carol (Economist)  
England : , : Wiley, , [2020]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The Economics of Crowdfunding [[electronic resource] ] : Startups, Portals and Investor Behavior / / edited by Douglas Cumming, Lars Hornuf
The Economics of Crowdfunding [[electronic resource] ] : Startups, Portals and Investor Behavior / / edited by Douglas Cumming, Lars Hornuf
Edizione [1st ed. 2018.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2018
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XX, 283 p. 29 illus.)
Disciplina 658.15224
Soggetto topico Investment banking
Securities
Capital market
Capital investments
Personal finance
Pensions
New business enterprises
Investments and Securities
Capital Markets
Investment Appraisal
Personal Finance/Wealth Management/Pension Planning
Start-Ups/Venture Capital
ISBN 3-319-66119-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 1: Introduction -- Part I Startups -- 2: Crowdfunding as a New Financing Tool -- 3: Signaling to Overcome Inefficiencies in Crowdfunding Markets -- 4: The Crowd-Entrepreneur Relationship in Startup Financing -- 5: Fraudulent Behavior by Entrepreneurs and Borrowers -- Part II Market Structure -- 6: Fintech and the Financing of SMEs and Entrepreneurs: From Crowdfunding to Marketplace Lending -- Part III Backers and Investors -- 7: Crowdfunding as a Font of Entrepreneurship: Outcomes of Reward-Based Crowdfunding -- 8: Crowdfunding Creative Ideas: The Dynamics of Project Backers -- Part IV Recent Regulatory Efforts -- 9: The Regulation of Crowdfunding in the United States. 10: The Regulation of Crowdfunding in Europe -- 11: Individual Investors’ Access to Crowdinvesting: Two Regulatory Models.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910299656803321
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2018
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Entrepreneurship, Finance, Governance and Ethics [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Robert Cressy, Douglas Cumming, Chris Mallin
Entrepreneurship, Finance, Governance and Ethics [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Robert Cressy, Douglas Cumming, Chris Mallin
Edizione [1st ed. 2013.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Dordrecht : , : Springer Netherlands : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (446 p.)
Disciplina 658.408
Collana Advances in Business Ethics Research, A Journal of Business Ethics Book Series
Soggetto topico Public finance
Ethics
Entrepreneurship
Public Economics
Financial Law/Fiscal Law
ISBN 1-283-91112-4
94-007-3867-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 1 Overview; Robert Cressy, Douglas Cumming and Christine Mallin -- Part I: Entrepreneurship, Venture Finance and Ethics -- 2 The Value of Country-level Perceived Ethics to Entrepreneurs around the World; April Knill.-  3 Do private equity firms respond better to financial distress than PLCs?; Robert Cressy and Hisham Farag -- 4 Deal Structuring in Philanthropic Venture Capital Investments -- Luisa Alemany and Mariarosa Scarlata -- 5 Law and Corruption in Venture Capital and Private Equity; Douglas Cumming, Grant Fleming, Sofia Johan and Dorra Najar -- Part II. The Impact of Regulation and Financial Structure on Ethics and Governance -- 6 The Development of the UK Alternative Investment  Market : Its Growth and Governance Challenges; Chris Mallin and Kean Ow-Yong -- 7 Controlling Shareholders’ Fiduciary Duties Owed to Minority Shareholders – A Comparative Approach: the United States and France; Celine Gainet -- 8 Harmonized Regulatory Standards, International Distribution of Investment Funds and the Recent Financial Crisis; Douglas Cumming, Gael Imad’Eddine and Armin Schwienbacher -- 9 Active Management of Socially Responsible Portfolios; Annalisa Fabretti and Stefano Herzel -- 10 A Socially Responsible Portfolio Selection Strategy; Stefano Herzel and Marco Nicolosi -- Part III. Ethics, Fraud and Managerial Decisions -- 11 Corporate Social Responsibility Boundaries; Celine Gainet -- 12 Voluntary and Mandatory Skin in the Game: Understanding Outside Directors Stock Holdings; Sanjai Bhagat and Heather Tookes -- 13 The causes and financial consequences of corporate frauds; Stefano Bonini and Diana Boraschi-Diaz -- 14 Corporate Governance and Corporate Strategies for Climate Control and Environmental Mitigation; Raj Aggawral and Sandra Dow -- Part IV. Ethics and Governance in China -- 15 The role of Mutual Funds in Deterring Corporate Fraud in China; Wenxuan Hou Edward Lee and Konstantinos Stathopoulous -- 16 Institutional Shareholders and Executive Compensation: An Ethical View; Shujun Ding, Chunxin Jia, Yianshun Li and Zhenyu Wu -- 17 Chinese Management Buyouts and Board Transformation; Mike Wright, Yao Li and Louise Scholes -- 18 Multiple Large Shareholders and Joint Expropriation with Dividend Payments; Huaili Lv and Wanli Li -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910438067703321
Dordrecht : , : Springer Netherlands : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Microfinance for Entrepreneurial Development [[electronic resource] ] : Sustainability and Inclusion in Emerging Markets / / edited by Douglas Cumming, Yizhe Dong, Wenxuan Hou, Binayak Sen
Microfinance for Entrepreneurial Development [[electronic resource] ] : Sustainability and Inclusion in Emerging Markets / / edited by Douglas Cumming, Yizhe Dong, Wenxuan Hou, Binayak Sen
Edizione [1st ed. 2017.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2017
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XVIII, 224 p. 8 illus.)
Disciplina 332
Soggetto topico Economic development projects—Finance
Personal finance
Pension plans
Development Finance
Personal Finance/Wealth Management/Pension Planning
ISBN 3-319-62111-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto 1. The End of Imagination? Understanding New Developments in Microfinance -- 2. The Influence of Formal and Informal Institutions on Microcredit: Financial Inclusion for Micro-Entrepreneurs by Lender Type -- 3. Microfinance for Entrepreneurial Development: Study of Women’s Group Enterprise Development in India -- 4. Perception of Microfinance Debtors and Loan Officers on the Importance of Entrepreneurial and Business Skills for Loan Repayment Rates -- 5. Choice of Finance in an Emerging Market: The Impact of Independent Decisions, Politics, and Religion -- 6. Managing Everyday Living: Microfinance and Capability -- 7. Credit, Microfinance, and Empowerment -- 8. Microfinance Impact Assessment Methodologies: Is it Qualitative, Quantitative, or Both? -- 9. What is Islamic Microfinance? -- 10. Determinants of Total Factor Productivity in Microfinance Institutions: Evidence from Bangladesh.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910255039303321
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2017
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Venture capital [[electronic resource] ] : investment strategies, structures, and policies / / Douglas J. Cumming, editor
Venture capital [[electronic resource] ] : investment strategies, structures, and policies / / Douglas J. Cumming, editor
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, N.J., : Wiley, c2010
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (603 p.)
Disciplina 332.04154
332/.04154
Altri autori (Persone) CummingDouglas
Collana The Robert W. Kolb series in finance
Soggetto topico Venture capital
ISBN 1-282-69120-1
9786612691201
0-470-59943-X
1-118-26690-0
0-470-59975-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Venture Capital: Investment Strategies, Structures, and Policies; Contents; Chapter 1: Introduction to the Companion to Venture Capital; INTRODUCTION; NOTES; REFERENCES; ABOUT THE AUTHOR AND EDITOR; Part I: Alternative Forms of Venture Capital; Chapter 2: Venture Capitalists Decision Making: An Information Processing Perspective; Chapter 3: Banks Versus Venture Capital in the Financing of New Ventures; Chapter 4: Corporate Venture Capital; Chapter 5: Angel Finance: The Other Venture Capital; Chapter 6: Business Incubation and Its Connection to Venture Capital
Chapter 7: Philanthropic Venture Capital: A New Model of Financing for Social EntrepreneursPart II: The Structure of Venture Capital Investments; Chapter 8: Financial Contracts and Venture Capitalists' Value-Added; Chapter 9: Venture Capitalists, Monitoring and Advising; Chapter 10: Project Externalities and Moral Hazard; Chapter 11: Doing It Not Alone: Antecedents, Dynamics, and Outcomes of Venture Capital Syndication; Part III: Venture Capital Value-Added and Conflicts; Chapter 12: Time to Grow Up: Large Sample Evidence on the Maturation Dynamics of Private Venture-Backed Firms
Chapter 13: How Do Venture Capitalists Create Value for Entrepreneurial Firms? A Review of the LiteratureChapter 14: Venture Capital and Innovation; Chapter 15: Reputation in Financial Intermediation: Evidence from Venture Capital; Chapter 16: Investor Opportunism, and Governance in Venture Capital; Chapter 17: Conflicts of Interest and Litigation in the Venture Capital Industry; Part IV: Venture Capital Exits and Returns; Chapter 18: Venture Capital Exits; Chapter 19: Returns to Venture Capital; Chapter 20: Venture Capitalists' Control: Stimulating or Stunting?
Part V: International Venture Capital and Public PolicyChapter 21: Cross-Border Venture Capital and Private Equity; Chapter 22: The Canadian Public Venture Capital Market; Chapter 23: Public Policy, Venture Capital, and Entrepreneurial Finance; Chapter 24: Twelve Meditations on Venture Capital; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910140600303321
Hoboken, N.J., : Wiley, c2010
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