What is it about?
This paper examines the influence of corporate governance characteristics on changes in total, market and idiosyncratic risk in the Portuguese capital market following the collapse of Lehman Brothers. We aim to address corporate practices, while determining if corporate governance characteristics can help predict future variations of the risk associated with a certain security and, in this sense, if these characteristics may be used to help monitor or forecast risk of an existing portfolio of securities over time.
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Why is it important?
Our results suggest that changes in risk measures over a shorter-term and a longer-term period vary with governance characteristics. The capital market rewarded companies with a greater proportion of non-executive directors and directors that exercise (on average) management roles in more companies or institutions. On the other hand, the capital market punished companies with a greater proportion of independent directors and greater ownership concentration.
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This page is a summary of: The influence of corporate governance on changes in risk following the global financial crisis: evidence from the Portuguese stock market, Journal of Management & Governance, October 2016, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s10997-016-9361-5.
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