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Capital-Market Effects of Securities Regulation: Hysteresis, Implementation, and EnforcementHans Bonde ChristensenUniversity of Chicago - Booth School of Business Luzi HailUniversity of Pennsylvania - The Wharton School Christian LeuzUniversity of Chicago - Booth School of Business; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI); Center for Financial Studies (CFS); University of Pennsylvania - Wharton Financial Institutions Center; CESifo Research Network November 25, 2011 Chicago Booth Research Paper No. 12-04 Abstract: This paper examines capital market effects of changes in securities regulation. We analyze two key directives in the European Union (EU) that tightened market abuse and transparency regulation and its enforcement. All EU member states were required to adopt these two directives, but did so at different points in time. Our research design exploits this differential timing of the same regulatory change to identify the capital-market effects. We also use cross-sectional variation in the strictness of implementation and enforcement as well as in prior regulation to analyze the role of these factors for regulatory outcomes. We find that, on average, market liquidity increases as EU countries tighten market abuse and transparency regulation. The effects are larger in countries that implement and enforce the directives more strictly. They are also stronger in countries with traditionally stricter securities regulation and with a better track record of implementing regulation and government policies in general. The results indicate that the same forces that have limited the effectiveness of regulation in the past are still at play when new rules are introduced, leading to hysteresis in regulatory outcomes. The findings also illustrate that imposing the same regulation in countries with different initial conditions can make countries diverge more, rather than move them closer together, which has important implications for global regulatory reform.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 70 Keywords: Capital market regulation, Enforcement, Disclosure, Law and finance, European Union, Liquidity JEL Classification: F30, G15, G18, G30, K22, M41 working papers seriesDate posted: January 23, 2011 ; Last revised: September 5, 2012Suggested CitationContact Information
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