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- Title
- American lookback options: Early exercise.
- Creator
- Abramov, Viatcheslav Alexander., Florida Atlantic University, Yuhn, Ky-hyang, College of Business, Department of Economics
- Abstract/Description
-
Lookback options are path dependent contingent claims whose payoff depend on the extrema of a given security's price over a given period. Some of these options are already traded on specialized markets (such as foreign exchange) and mostly in over-the-counter market alongside with other path dependent options (knock-ins, knock-outs, etc.). This thesis examines the existing pricing models of conventional options as well as standard European lookback options and provides some results about...
Show moreLookback options are path dependent contingent claims whose payoff depend on the extrema of a given security's price over a given period. Some of these options are already traded on specialized markets (such as foreign exchange) and mostly in over-the-counter market alongside with other path dependent options (knock-ins, knock-outs, etc.). This thesis examines the existing pricing models of conventional options as well as standard European lookback options and provides some results about early exercise of their American counterparts with the use of notions from the theory of optimal stopping.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1995
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/15177
- Subject Headings
- Options (Finance), Derivative securities
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- The effect of shareholder rights and information asymmetry on option-related repurchase activity.
- Creator
- Golden, Nan, Kohlbeck, Mark, Florida Atlantic University, College of Business, School of Accounting
- Abstract/Description
-
I investigate the effect of shareholder rights and information asymmetry on option-related repurchase activity. Prior research shows that the dilution effect of the exercise of the employee stock options on earnings per share (EPS) decreases the value of stock options. Thus, managers tend to use stock repurchases rather than dividends to return cash to shareholders (the dividend substitution effect). I document that the executive stock option incentives to repurchase stock as a substitute for...
Show moreI investigate the effect of shareholder rights and information asymmetry on option-related repurchase activity. Prior research shows that the dilution effect of the exercise of the employee stock options on earnings per share (EPS) decreases the value of stock options. Thus, managers tend to use stock repurchases rather than dividends to return cash to shareholders (the dividend substitution effect). I document that the executive stock option incentives to repurchase stock as a substitute for dividends are stronger when firms have weak shareholder rights and the level of information asymmetry positively influences managerial stock option incentives to repurchase stock. Furthermore, prior research indicates that information asymmetry is positively associated with stock repurchases. I also provide evidence indicating that the relationship between information asymmetry and stock repurchases is stronger when firms have weaker shareholder rights.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2015
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00004373, http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00004373
- Subject Headings
- Corporate governance, Corporations -- Finance, Dividends -- Econometric models, Employee stock options, Investment analysis, Stock options -- Econometric models
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- On financing with convertible debt over the last two decades.
- Creator
- Rotaru, Camelia S., Florida Atlantic University, McDaniel, William R.
- Abstract/Description
-
Despite extensive research, the rationale behind firms' decision to issue convertible debt is still unknown. On average, results indicate that the market reacts more negatively to new convertible debt issues of companies with higher cash ratios. Hence, I test whether convertible issuers are companies with limited access to the debt and equity markets. I find that pre-1990 issuers have a propensity to accumulate cash out of their cash flows prior to the convertible debt issue. Moreover, I...
Show moreDespite extensive research, the rationale behind firms' decision to issue convertible debt is still unknown. On average, results indicate that the market reacts more negatively to new convertible debt issues of companies with higher cash ratios. Hence, I test whether convertible issuers are companies with limited access to the debt and equity markets. I find that pre-1990 issuers have a propensity to accumulate cash out of their cash flows prior to the convertible debt issue. Moreover, I provide strong evidence that convertible issuers substitute cash for both short-term debt and non-cash net working capital. I also test the pricing of new convertible debt securities at issue. I use a 100-step trinomial tree and find that convertible bonds are issued at an average discount 4.84 from their fair market value. Although the discount appears to be slightly higher in the pre-1990 period than the post-1990 period, the difference is not statistically significant. I also test for the determinants of the degree of underpricing of new convertible debt securities. I find that longer maturity issues and issues with higher coupon rates are more underpriced in the pre-1990 period. I attribute this finding to the poor stock and bond markets of the early and mid 1980s, which caused investors to become weary about long-term fixed income instruments. I find that longer maturity issues are less underpriced in the post-1990 period. This is probably because the value of the conversion option increases with maturity. Furthermore, it appears that issues with higher coupon rates and lower conversion premiums are less underpriced. I attribute this finding to investors being more informed in the post-1990 period and, therefore, less willing to accept higher conversion premiums. I also show that cash redemptions of convertible debt securities are not associated with a negative market reaction, even though forced conversions result in an abnormal negative return at the time of the announcement. Contrary to previous arguments by Stein (1992) and Moody's, I find no evidence that companies force conversion of their securities in order to avoid future bankruptcy.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2005
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FADT12129
- Subject Headings
- Convertible Preferred Stocks, Corporations--Finance, Option (Contract), Convertible Securities
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Essays on investing.
- Creator
- Johnson, William Fount III, College of Business, Department of Finance
- Abstract/Description
-
The Market Timing - Buy and Hold (MT-BH) is introduced, tested against widely accepted performance models of market timing and tested if implamentation is possible. The MT-BH metric measures the condition of engaging in market timing strategies relative to buy and hold investing across an equity market. The metric provides an alternative explanation to why market timing results of investors and managers vary through time and across different equity markets. This dissertation examines how the...
Show moreThe Market Timing - Buy and Hold (MT-BH) is introduced, tested against widely accepted performance models of market timing and tested if implamentation is possible. The MT-BH metric measures the condition of engaging in market timing strategies relative to buy and hold investing across an equity market. The metric provides an alternative explanation to why market timing results of investors and managers vary through time and across different equity markets. This dissertation examines how the is correlated with traditional market timing measures of the Treynor and Sharpe ratios over the 1995-2010 time period and how it affects widely used measures of regression based market timing models of Treynor- Mazuy and Henriksson-Merton. The Market Timing - Buy and Hold (MT-BH) metric can be applied to any equity market over any time period to condition the market timing skill of money managers in any equity market around the world. The final accomplishment of this dissertation is to determine if readily available finance and macro-economic variables can help investors determine which years are more favorable to pursue market timing strategies and which years favor buy and hold investing. When real GDP growth rates, inflation rates and PE ratios were low or negative and when dividend yields were high, market timing strategies were favorable across 44 country market indexes from 1994-2008. These results were robust to country level of development, negative market return years and other control variables. The conditions for pursing market timing strategies were time variant and detectable with macro-economic and finance variables. The MT-BH metric allows investors and brokers to determine when to switch from buy and hold investing to a market timing strategy using macro-economic and financial variables and helps to explain why market timing skill of managers is rarely found to be persistent.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2011
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/FAU/3183131
- Subject Headings
- Investment analysis, Stock options, Portfolio management, Finance, Personal, Asset allocation, Assets (Accounting), Prices, Forecasting, Econometric models
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Modeling and simulating interest rates via time-dependent mean reversion.
- Creator
- Dweck, Andrew Jason, Long, Hongwei, Florida Atlantic University, Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, Department of Mathematical Sciences
- Abstract/Description
-
The purpose of this thesis is to compare the effectiveness of several interest rate models in fitting the true value of interest rates. Up until 1990, the universally accepted models were the equilibrium models, namely the Rendleman-Bartter model, the Vasicek model, and the Cox-Ingersoll-Ross (CIR) model. While these models were probably considered relatively accurate around the time of their discovery, they do not provide a good fit to the initial term structure of interest rates, making...
Show moreThe purpose of this thesis is to compare the effectiveness of several interest rate models in fitting the true value of interest rates. Up until 1990, the universally accepted models were the equilibrium models, namely the Rendleman-Bartter model, the Vasicek model, and the Cox-Ingersoll-Ross (CIR) model. While these models were probably considered relatively accurate around the time of their discovery, they do not provide a good fit to the initial term structure of interest rates, making them substandard for use by traders in pricing interest rate options. The fourth model we consider is the Hull-White one-factor model, which does provide this fit. After calibrating, simulating, and comparing these four models, we find that the Hull-White model gives the best fit to our data sets.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2014
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00004103, http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00004103
- Subject Headings
- Game theory, Investment analysis, Options (Finance), Recursive functions, Stochastic differential equations
- Format
- Document (PDF)