2 resultados para Stocks (Finance).
em CiencIPCA - Instituto Politécnico do Cávado e do Ave, Portugal
Resumo:
The problematic of dividends paid out by firms has deserved the attention of several studies, theoretical and empirical, on corporate finance. This article intends to contribute to the theme by determining the factors that influence a firm’s dividends` policy. In this sense, it investigates the effect of a set of factors on the dividends paid out by issuing non financial firms belonging to Euronext Lisbon. Results suggest the existence of firm specific characteristics influencing its dividends policy. A firm’s Cash-flow and its stocks` market price seem to have a positive impact on the dividends paid out to stockholders. In issuing non financial firms that belong to the PSI 20 Index results additionally show the existence of a negative effect of net profits on dividend’s payment.
Resumo:
This paper analyses the performance and investment styles of internationally oriented Socially Responsible Investment (SRI)funds, domiciled in eight European markets, in comparison with characteristics-matched conventional funds. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first multi-country study, focused on international SRI funds (investing in Global and in European equities), to combine the matched-pairs approach with the use of robust conditional multi-factor performance evaluation models, which allow for both time-varying alphas and betas and also control for home biases and spurious regression biases.In general, the results show that differences in the performance of international SRI funds and their conventional peers are not statistically significant. Regarding investment styles, SRI and conventional funds exhibit similar factor exposures in most cases. In addition,conventional benchmarks present a higher explaining power of SRI fund returns than SRI benchmarks. Our results also show significant differences in the investment styles of SRI funds according to whether they use “best-in-class” screening strategies or not. When compared to SRI funds that employ simple negative and/or positive screens, SRI “best-in-class” funds present significantly lower exposures to small caps and momentum strategies and significantly higher exposures to local stocks.