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3548 items in total found

Books | 2022

Pulses for food and nutritional security of India: Production, markets and trade

Poornima Varma

Springer

Books | 2022

Causes and symptoms of socio-cultural polarization: Role of information and communication technologies

Israr Qureshi, Babita Bhat, Samrat Gupta and Amit Anand Tiwari

Journal Articles | 2022

Impact of price path on disposition bias

Avijit Bansal and Joshy Jacob

Journal of Banking & Finance

Recent experimental studies have illustrated the influence of price-path, particularly the `non-straight' price-path on several aspects of investor behavior. The paper computes a proxy for price-path based on Cumulative Prospect Theory and with investor- level high-frequency trade data from the commodities futures market, demonstrates that the nature of the price-path significantly impacts the degree of disposition bias, after controlling for the level of returns and volatility of the commodity. We find that the experience of a favorable (unfavorable) price-path, decreases (increases) disposition bias among the traders with Prospect Theory preferences. The decline (increase) in disposition bias is an outcome of the decline (increase) in the propensity for gain realization, accompanied by a concurrent increase (decline) in the propensity for loss realization among the traders. We conjecture that both investor preferences and beliefs about future price movement, inferred from the price-path experienced, influence their trading decisions.

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Working Papers | 2022

Arbitrage constraints and behaviour of volatility components: Evidence from a natural experiment

Pranjal Srivastava and Joshy Jacob

Short-selling constraints are known to impede information flow into the financial markets, particularly that of negative information. We employ “Regulation SHO” as a natural experiment to examine how the lowering of short sale constraints impacts the information flow. Specifically, we investigate whether large and small volatility jumps significantly change around the regulatory change, for the treated (Pilot) and control-group (non-Pilot) stocks. We find that large (small) jumps significantly decline (rise) as an outcome of the relaxation of short sale constraints, despite an increase in the variance of the Pilot stocks. The decline in the intensity of large jumps and the simultaneous increase in the intensity of small jumps suggest more efficient information flow into the market. Furthermore, the decline is larger for firms facing greater short-sale constraints, indicating that the impact of short-sale constraints are more pronounced for them. Implying that the change in the jump components is brought about by the easing of the short sale constraints, we also find that the decline in the large jump intensity is higher for firms with lower conservatism in information disclosure.

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Working Papers | 2022

Risk information - normal markets and the COVID-19 pandemic period

Pranjal Srivastava and Joshy Jacob

The paper investigates how the market infers changes in the firm-level discount rate (risk information) in normal and turbulent times. The study focuses on two key sources of risk information, earnings announcements of firms and changes in the market risk premium. We employ a recently proposed measure that limits the impact of event risk while estimating the forward-looking risk information from option prices. We find that both earnings announcements and the changes in market risk impact firm-level discount rates, but both sources exhibit a significant time variation. The impact of market risk changes is lower in favorable conditions and higher during crisis periods. Using COVID19 as an exogenous shock, we show that the influence of earnings announcements becomes insignificant during a crisis. The results suggest lower attention to firm-specific risk factors in times of a systemic crisis, in contrast to normal times.

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Books | 2022

Brands and the Brain

Arvind Sahay

Penguin Random House India

Books | 2022

Reverse subsidies in global monopsony capitalism: Gender, labour and environmental injustice in garment value chains

Dev Nathan, Shikha S. Bhattacharjee, S. Rahul, Purushottam Kumar, Immanuel Dahagani, Sukhpal Singh and Padmini Swaminathan

Cambridge University Press

Working Papers | 2022

Cyclically Adjusted PE ratio (CAPE) and Stock Market Characteristics in India

Joshy Jacob and K.P Pradeep

We estimate the Cyclically Adjusted PE ratio (CAPE) for equity indices in the
Indian market. We find the average CAPE ratio of the Indian market is lower than that of the US. Judging the market valuation level based on a long-term moving average of CAPE, we find that the CAPE has remained above the average since 2014. Prominent episodes where CAPE exceeds its average include the period before the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the post-COVID-19 period. We find that a higher CAPE is associated with lower future returns for holding periods varying from one year to ten years, indicating the negative association between expected returns and CAPE. We also find that a higher CAPE is associated with a greater
demand for IPOs by investors and more optimistic earnings forecasts by analysts.
Net fundraising through equity significantly increases during periods of high CAPE
suggesting rational market timing by firms.

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Working Papers | 2022

Fishing in muddy waters: Mergers and acquisitions during uncertainty

Balagopal Gopalakrishnan, Joshy Jacob, and Jagriti Srivastava

Using the COVID-19 pandemic as an exogenous shock, we examine whether firms engage in opportunistic mergers and acquisitions during uncertainty. Particularly, we analyze the inorganic growth strategies of acquiring firms faced with disproportionate pandemic-induced opportunities using a cross-country deal-level data. We find a significant increase in the deal completion propensity and deal size, and a decrease in the deal completion time for acquirers that are more amenable to remote working. The effect is more pronounced when both the acquirer and the target are amenable to remote working. Our findings indicate that amenable firms, which were initially reluctant to engage in opportunistic acquisitions, engaged aggressively in the subsequent quarters with an abatement in pandemic-induced uncertainty. The study provides novel insights into the behaviour of acquisitive firms during the pandemic.

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Working Papers | 2022

India's Progressive Environmental Case Law: A Worthy Roadmap for Global Climate Change Litigation

M.P. Ram Mohan, Els Reynaers Kini, and Sriram Prasad

This paper explores how the long-standing tradition of common law countries such as India, which have acknowledged the fundamental right to a healthy and pollution free life for many decades, can assist Judges in other jurisdictions and inform global climate governance. More specifically, many other common law and civil law jurisdictions are faced for the first time with having to interpret and assess whether there is a fundamental right to a healthy and pollution free environment. This question forces them to review whether state inaction on climate change infringes this fundamental right. This paper examines how Indian courts have adjudicated environment and climate litigation. We further scrutinize the classification of cases
as climate litigation in the Indian context to try and truly unearth Indian jurisprudence on environment and climate protection. The paper also examines the trends observable and the way forward for environment and climate litigation in India. We compare the four human rights based climate litigations before the European Court of Human Rights with Indian jurisprudence to understand transnational climate litigation better.

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