Institutional Investors and the Language of Finance: The Global Metrics of Market Performance
- 1 January 2005
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
With the collapse of the TMT bubble and a number of high-profile scandals of corporate governance around the world, the language of finance is being re-written to include market inefficiency. Not surprisingly, there is an increasing premium on market information - national and international. As a consequence, the argument in favour of global standards has gained force, encouraged by new institutions such as the IASB. Co-existence of reporting standards seems a most unlikely prospect just as harmonisation may be less important than convergence to a set of standards deemed to be best practice in terms of global financial performance. With the increasing global significance of institutional investors and their portfolio managers, common standards set within well-defined parameters are clearly on the agenda; convergence is the name of the game rather than a tapestry of multi-coloured threads stitched together for the sake of expediency. In this paper, we develop these observations paying particular regard to the interests of institutional investors as well as the burgeoning market for global metrics not just national reporting standards.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- The locational and institutional embeddedness of electronic markets: the case of the global capital marketsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2004
- Is Our Industry Intellectually Lazy?CFA Magazine, 2004
- Change in the German Model of Corporate Governance: Evidence from Blockholdings 1997–2001Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2003
- The Capital Asset Pricing Model: Theory and EvidenceSSRN Electronic Journal, 2003
- Comment on Ewald Engelen: The European Model is UnsustainableEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2003
- Law and FinanceJournal of Political Economy, 1998
- Financial Transparency and Corporate Governance: You Manage What You MeasureColumbia Law Review, 1996
- The Modern Industrial Revolution, Exit, and the Failure of Internal Control SystemsThe Journal of Finance, 1993
- Efficient Capital Markets: A Review of Theory and Empirical WorkThe Journal of Finance, 1970
- PORTFOLIO SELECTION*The Journal of Finance, 1952