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Volume 71: Issue 5 (October 2016)


ISSUE INFORMATION ‐ ED BOARD

Pages: 1923-1923  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12342  |  Cited by: 0


ISSUE INFORMATION ‐ HELP DESK

Pages: 1924-1924  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12343  |  Cited by: 0


ISSUE INFORMATION ‐ TOC

Pages: 1925-1925  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12341  |  Cited by: 0


Stewart C. Myers

Pages: 1927-1932  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12441  |  Cited by: 0


Who Borrows from the Lender of Last Resort?

Pages: 1933-1974  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12421  |  Cited by: 165

ITAMAR DRECHSLER, THOMAS DRECHSEL, DAVID MARQUES‐IBANEZ, PHILIPP SCHNABL

We analyze lender of last resort (LOLR) lending during the European sovereign debt crisis. Using a novel data set on all central bank lending and collateral, we show that weakly capitalized banks took out more LOLR loans and used riskier collateral than strongly capitalized banks. We also find that weakly capitalized banks used LOLR loans to buy risky assets such as distressed sovereign debt. This resulted in a reallocation of risky assets from strongly to weakly capitalized banks. Our findings cannot be explained by classical LOLR theory. Rather, they point to risk taking by banks, both independently and with the encouragement of governments, and highlight the benefit of unifying LOLR lending and bank supervision.


Trade Credit and Industry Dynamics: Evidence from Trucking Firms

Pages: 1975-2016  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12371  |  Cited by: 215

JEAN‐NOËL BARROT

Long payment terms are a strong impediment to the entry and survival of liquidity‐constrained firms. To test this idea and its implications, I consider the effect of a reform restricting the trade credit supply of French trucking firms. In a difference‐in‐differences setting, I find that trucking firms' corporate default probability decreases by 25% following the restriction. The effect is persistent, concentrated among liquidity‐constrained firms, and not offset by a decrease in profits. The restriction also triggers an increase in the entry of small trucking firms.


Financing Constraints and Workplace Safety

Pages: 2017-2058  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12430  |  Cited by: 168

JONATHAN B. COHN, MALCOLM I. WARDLAW

We present evidence that financing frictions adversely impact investment in workplace safety, with implications for worker welfare and firm value. Using several identification strategies, we find that injury rates increase with leverage and negative cash flow shocks, and decrease with positive cash flow shocks. We show that firm value decreases substantially with injury rates. Our findings suggest that investment in worker safety is an economically important margin on which firms respond to financing constraints.


Capital Investment, Innovative Capacity, and Stock Returns

Pages: 2059-2094  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12419  |  Cited by: 51

PRAVEEN KUMAR, DONGMEI LI

We study the dynamic implications of capital investment in innovative capacity (IC) on future stock returns, investment, and profitability by modeling the unique effects of IC investment on uncertain option generation/exercise and postexercise revenue. The model highlights the diverse effects of IC investment on expected returns in different postinvestment regimes and yields the novel prediction that, under the neoclassical assumption of nonincreasing revenue returns, IC investment is positively related to subsequent cumulative stock returns with a lag. The model also predicts a positive effect of IC investment on future investment and profitability. We find strong empirical support for these predictions.


Speculative Betas

Pages: 2095-2144  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12431  |  Cited by: 185

HARRISON HONG, DAVID A. SRAER

The risk and return trade‐off, the cornerstone of modern asset pricing theory, is often of the wrong sign. Our explanation is that high‐beta assets are prone to speculative overpricing. When investors disagree about the stock market's prospects, high‐beta assets are more sensitive to this aggregate disagreement, experience greater divergence of opinion about their payoffs, and are overpriced due to short‐sales constraints. When aggregate disagreement is low, the Security Market Line is upward‐sloping due to risk‐sharing. When it is high, expected returns can actually decrease with beta. We confirm our theory using a measure of disagreement about stock market earnings.


Why Invest in Emerging Markets? The Role of Conditional Return Asymmetry

Pages: 2145-2192  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12420  |  Cited by: 139

ERIC GHYSELS, ALBERTO PLAZZI, ROSSEN VALKANOV

We propose a quantile‐based measure of conditional skewness, particularly suitable for handling recalcitrant emerging market (EM) returns. The skewness of international stock market returns varies significantly across countries over time, and persists at long horizons. In EMs, skewness is mostly positive and idiosyncratic, and significantly relates to a country's financial and trade openness and balance of payments. In an international portfolio setting, return asymmetry leads to sizeable certainty‐equivalent gains and increases the weight on emerging countries to about 30%. Investing in EMs seems to be about expectations of a higher upside than downside, consistent with recent theories.


Can Brokers Have It All? On the Relation between Make‐Take Fees and Limit Order Execution Quality

Pages: 2193-2238  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12422  |  Cited by: 123

ROBERT BATTALIO, SHANE A. CORWIN, ROBERT JENNINGS

We identify retail brokers that seemingly route orders to maximize order flow payments, by selling market orders and sending limit orders to venues paying large liquidity rebates. Angel, Harris, and Spatt argue that such routing may not always be in customers’ best interests. For both proprietary limit order data and a broad sample of trades from TAQ, we document a negative relation between several measures of limit order execution quality and rebate/fee level. This finding suggests that order routing designed to maximize liquidity rebates does not maximize limit order execution quality and thus brokers cannot have it all.


Firing Costs and Capital Structure Decisions

Pages: 2239-2286  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12403  |  Cited by: 362

MATTHEW SERFLING


Boom and Gloom

Pages: 2287-2332  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12391  |  Cited by: 17

PAUL POVEL, GIORGO SERTSIOS, RENÁTA KOSOVÁ, PRAVEEN KUMAR

We study the performance of investments made at different points of an investment cycle. We use a large data set covering hotels in the United States, with rich details on their location, characteristics, and performance. We find that hotels built during hotel construction booms underperform their peers. For hotels built during local hotel construction booms, this underperformance persists for several decades. We examine possible explanations for this long‐lasting underperformance. The evidence is consistent with information‐based herding explanations.


Picking Winners? Investment Consultants’ Recommendations of Fund Managers

Pages: 2333-2370  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12289  |  Cited by: 78

TIM JENKINSON, HOWARD JONES, JOSE VICENTE MARTINEZ

Investment consultants advise institutional investors on their choice of fund manager. Focusing on U.S. actively managed equity funds, we analyze the factors that drive consultants’ recommendations, what impact these recommendations have on flows, and how well the recommended funds perform. We find that investment consultants’ recommendations of funds are driven largely by soft factors, rather than the funds’ past performance, and that their recommendations have a significant effect on fund flows. However, we find no evidence that these recommendations add value, suggesting that the search for winners, encouraged and guided by investment consultants, is fruitless.


Advertising Expensive Mortgages

Pages: 2371-2416  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12423  |  Cited by: 128

UMIT G. GURUN, GREGOR MATVOS, AMIT SERU

Using information on advertising and mortgages originated by subprime lenders, we study whether advertising helped consumers find cheaper mortgages. Lenders that advertise more within a region sell more expensive mortgages, measured as the excess rate of a mortgage after accounting for borrower, contract, and regional characteristics. These effects are stronger for mortgages sold to less sophisticated consumers. We exploit regional variation in mortgage advertising induced by the entry of Craigslist and other tests to demonstrate that these findings are not spurious. Analyzing advertising content reveals that initial/introductory rates are frequently advertised in a salient fashion, where reset rates are not.


The Price of Political Uncertainty: Theory and Evidence from the Option Market

Pages: 2417-2480  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12406  |  Cited by: 502

BRYAN KELLY, ĽUBOŠ PÁSTOR, PIETRO VERONESI

We empirically analyze the pricing of political uncertainty, guided by a theoretical model of government policy choice. To isolate political uncertainty, we exploit its variation around national elections and global summits. We find that political uncertainty is priced in the equity option market as predicted by theory. Options whose lives span political events tend to be more expensive. Such options provide valuable protection against the price, variance, and tail risks associated with political events. This protection is more valuable in a weaker economy and amid higher political uncertainty. The effects of political uncertainty spill over across countries.


MISCELLANEA

Pages: 2481-2482  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12440  |  Cited by: 0


ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pages: 2483-2483  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12442  |  Cited by: 0


Issue Information ‐ Seeking Permission

Pages: 2484-2484  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12347  |  Cited by: 0


Issue Information ‐ Style Instuctions

Pages: 2485-2485  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12344  |  Cited by: 0


AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION

Pages: 2486-2486  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12345  |  Cited by: 0


AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION

Pages: 2487-2487  |  Published: 9/2016  |  DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12346  |  Cited by: 0