FISF Professors Successively Receive Admission for Publication of 8 Papers on A-level Journals, Contributing Wisdom to Financial Innovation and Development
发布时间:2021-09-28
During the period from March to September 2021, Professor
Huasheng Gao, Donghui Shi, Shang-Jin Wei, Liang Jiang, Jarrad Harford, Shiyi
Chen and Huafeng Chen at FISF have successively received admission or
publication of 8 papers on A-level journals, including Journal of
Financial Economics, Journal of International Economics, Review of Economics and Statistics, and Strategic Management Journal (in the order of
the publication time). So far, the school has published a total of 74 papers on
globally well-known journals, among which 50 were admitted by first-rate
journals, constituting a huge contribution of wisdom to the financial
innovation and development in China and all over the world.
The abstracts of the 8 papers admitted
by A-level journals are as follows:

The paper entitled “Does Good Luck Make People Overconfident? Evidence
from a Natural Experiment in the Stock Market” coauthored by Huasheng Gao,
Donghui Shi and Bin Zhao was published in the Journal of Corporate Finance, a world-renowned
publication. It studies the changes in the investment behaviors of personal
investors in China after stagging successfully. Compared to those failing in
stagging, these investors display overconfidence:
they are doing business more frequently, and are more likely to buy gambling
lottery-like stocks, causing a decrease in return on stock investment instead.
This phenomenon is particularly evident for less experienced investors. Evidence
in the paper shows that good luck can be blinding and may lead to
overconfidence.
The paper entitled “Deadly
Discrimination: Implications of ‘Missing Girls’ for Workplace Safety”
coauthored by Zhibo Tan, Shang-Jin Wei and Xiaobo Zhang was accepted for
publication by the globally renowned Journal
of Development Economics. As a
result of the traditional idea of preference of boys to girls, millions of
girls in China, India, Vietnam, South Korea and many other countries failed to
be born while they should have. This is called “lost girls” in the document.
The paper focuses on the indirect but deadly consequence arising from such phenomenon. Covering such a
wide territory, different regions in China may vary greatly in punishing the
idea of preference of boys to girls and violation of the family planning policy, which results in
different degree of gender imbalance. Depending on the difference of gender
proportion among young people in China in various regions and time period, as
well as four different databases, the paper explores the relationship between
the degree of gender imbalance and local production safety, and discovers that
in regions severely lacking females at the marriageable age, the incidence of
parents of males at the marriageable age suffering from accidental injuries and
death related to their workplace is remarkably higher. In conclusion, reducing
gender discrimination can increase production safety.
The paper “Bootstrap Inference for Quantile Treatment Effects
in Randomized Experiments with Matched Pairs” coauthored by Liang Jiang,
Xiaobin Liu, Peter C.B. Phillips and Yichong Zhang was published on the
world-leading journal Review of
Economics and Statistics. The
paper discusses the inference method for quantile
treatment effects in randomized experiments with matched pairs. It finds that the
traditional bootstrap inference method may give rise to
the problem of conservative verification as it cannot depict negative
correlation issues in the pairs, while distribution analysis requires to choose
multiple adjusting parameters. The paper proposes two types of bootstrap
inference methods, both of which can precisely approximate the limit
distribution of quantile treatment effects and avoid parameter adjustments. The
method weighted by the propensity score, in particular, can be applied to
randomized experiments with matched pairs with unknown identifications.
The paper “Anticompetitive Effects of Horizontal
Acquisitions: The Impact of Within-industry Product Similarity” coauthored by
Maryam Fathollahi, Jarrad Harford and Sandy Klasa was recognized by the
world-leading Journal of Financial
Economics. It predicts that in
concentrated industries with relatively high product similarity, horizontal
acquisition can effectively raise the market competitiveness of existing
enterprises. Based on a new method to measure product similarity in an industry, the paper discovers that in such
industries, enterprises are more inclined to conduct horizontal acquisitions,
which will bring more active announcement returns to the acquiring firms and
competitors while paying higher premiums to the target companies. In addition,
these transactions will cause damage to companies dependent on customers and
suppliers. They will be more likely to be challenged by antitrust institutions.
Overall, by emphasizing the significance of product similarity, the paper is an
empirical result conducive to explaining the inconsistent conclusions of
whether horizontal acquisitions can be used to reduce competition intensity.
The paper entitled “Endogenous Corporate Leverage Response to
a Safer Macro Environment: The Case of Foreign Exchange Reserve Accumulation”
coauthored by Hui Tong and Shang-Jin Wei was published on the globally
first-rate Journal of International
Economics. It points out that
by taking measures like enhancing foreign exchange reserves, a country can
strengthen its defensive capability to deal from the macroscopic level with
sudden reversal of international capital flows or fluctuations in international
interest rates, and lesson in principle the financial vulnerability of its enterprises
and the whole economy. However, the effectiveness of such policies may be
offset by more risk behaviors at the microscopic level conducted by domestic
enterprises. According to data, the paper identifies a steady but previously
unnoticed rule that the leverage ratio of enterprises often rises with the
increase of national foreign exchange reserves. This rule is more vivid in
uncertain and more sensitive industries. In terms of methodology, solving
causality is a two-pronged instrumental variable strategy: on one hand,
adopting the price fluctuation of global commodities and the proportion of
commodities in exports to determine the instrumental variables of foreign
exchange reserves, and on the other hand, focusing on the leverage behaviors of
companies with neither the input nor the output dependent on commodities.
The paper entitled “The ‘Butterfly Effect’ in Strategic Human
Capital: Mitigating the Endogeneity Concern About the Relationship Between
Turnover and Performance” coauthored by Guoli Chen, Xin Deng, Huasheng Gao and
Ithai Stern was published on the world-renowned Strategic Management Journal. It states that studies in the past did
not solve endogeneity concern about the relationship between turnover and
performance: it can be either the loss of human capital causing declined
performance or the declined performance causing the loss of human capital. Taking
Fukushima nuclear power leak as an exogenous shock, the paper analyzes how this
event has affected US enterprises close to nuclear power plants in the US. The
conclusion is: For fear of nuclear power arising from Fukushima nuclear power
leak, there has been an evident tendency of voluntary employee resignation from
enterprises close to nuclear power plants in the US (even though the local
nuclear power facilities were not affected by Fukushima tsunami in Japan). This
exogenous turnover boom leads to declined performance of these US enterprises.
Shiyi Chen, Michael T. Chng and Qingfu Liu coauthored the
paper “The Implied Arbitrage Mechanism in Financial Markets”, which was
published in the famous, Journal
of Econometrics. The paper
referred that no arbitrage condition is a basic concept in financial market
research, but often the arbitrage mechanism implied in securities trading is
rarely observed. For this, it analyzes the implied arbitrage mechanism in
financial markets by constructing the generalized smooth transformation of
vector error correction model (GST-VECM), proving the applicability of GST-VECM
to market arbitrage in various situations on the basis of
explaining the major concepts of GST function parameters. Unlike existing
studies, GST-VECM can figure out the implied arbitrage section, evaluate the
arbitrage intensity of upper and lower limits of asymmetry and introduce
convergence risk in statistic arbitrage. Taking the example of the future-spot
arbitrage before and after the launch of China’s CSI300 ETF, the paper uses
GST-VECM to specifically reveal how changes in structural policies at the
microscopic level influence the pricing relativity between stock index futures
and spot market and further transform the future-spot arbitrage mechanism.
The paper entitled “Measuring Operating Leverage” coauthored
by Huafeng Chen, Jason V.Chen, Feng Li and Pengfei Li was published by
world-famous Review of Asset
Pricing Studies. It studies a
simple operational leverage metrics: the ratio of fixed cost (measured by adding depreciation and amortization
to selling, general and administrative expenses) to capital market (or book)
value. The paper finds that such method of measuring operational leverage can
positively predict returns. It is not explained by common factors. On the other
hand, it performs better than traditional operational leverage methods.
Besides, the exploratory two-factor model with the factor of the operational
leverage is at least as effective as Fama five-factor pricing model.
(The papers above are listed in the
order of their publication time.)