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Dive into the research topics where Haizhi Wang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Haizhi Wang.


Managerial Finance | 2009

Do better institutions improve bank efficiency? Evidence from a transitional economy

Iftekhar Hasan; Haizhi Wang; Mingming Zhou

The pace of transition in China over the last two decades has led to great variation across the country in terms of institutional and financial development. In this paper, using a panel of Chinese provinces during the period 1993-2006, we empirically investigate the determinants of the efficiency of the banking sector from an institutional perspective. The most important institutional developments in China are the emergence and gradual dominance of the market economy, financial deepening, the growth of a private sector, the establishment of secure property rights, and rule of law. We find that institutional variables play an important role in affecting banking efficiencies, and that banks tend to operate more efficiently in those regions with a greater private sector presence and more property rights awareness, while the role of financial deepening and rule of law is less straightforward.


Pacific Economic Review | 2015

Banking structure, marketization and small business development: Regional evidence from China

Iftekhar Hasan; Nada Kobeissi; Haizhi Wang; Mingming Zhou

This paper provides an empirical examination of the regional banking structures in China and their effects on entrepreneurial activity. Using a panel of 27 provinces and four directly controlled municipalities from 1997 through 2008, we find that the presence of large banking institutions negatively correlates with small business development in local markets and that this negative relation is driven mainly by participation of large banks in the short-term loan market. Rural banking institutions, in contrast, are found to promote regional entrepreneurial activity. Moreover, large state banks facilitate small business development in concentrated markets. When we interact measures of banking financing by state banks and rural banking institutions with a set of provincial level marketization indexes, we find that extensive marketization, factor market development, and sophistication of legal frameworks mitigate the negative effect of large state banks on small business development. In provinces with advanced market development, efficient factor markets, and favorable institutional settings, the positive effect of rural banking institutions on small business growth is even stronger. Finally, we present evidence that banks do a better job of promoting regional entrepreneurship when it occurs in conjunction with policies to foster innovation activity and assure protection of intellectual property rights.


Studies in Economics and Finance | 2015

New evidence on alliance experience and acquisition performance: Short-run pain, long-run gain?

Yiwei Fang; Dawei Jin; Xian Sun; Haizhi Wang

Purpose – This study aims to build on the organizational learning theory and propose a complex strategy by combining strategic alliance with subsequent acquisitions to penetrate new product markets. The authors empirically examined whether and to what extent preacquisition alliance experience affects the short- and long-term stock performance of acquiring firms. Design/methodology/approach – Data on acquisitions, in which the acquirers have experience from preacquisition alliance activities in their targets’ respective industry, were collected. Diversifying acquisitions were focused upon to ensure that preacquisition alliance experience is the major source of organizational learning. A standard event study to examine acquirers’ abnormal returns was used and a Fama-French calendar-time portfolio approach to gauge long-run abnormal stock performance was adopted. In addition, regression analysis was conducted to investigate the alliance–acquisition relationship, controlling a set of variables capturing firm ...


Innovation-the European Journal of Social Science Research | 2017

Enforceability of noncompetition agreements and firm innovation: does state regulation matter?

Desheng Yin; Iftekhar Hasan; Nada Kobeissi; Haizhi Wang

Abstract In this study, we examine how noncompetition agreements and the mobility of human capital – a core asset of any firm – affect innovations of publicly traded firms in the United States. We find that firms in states with stricter noncompetition enforcement have fewer patent applications. We also examine patent forward citations and find that tougher enforcement of such contracts is associated with less innovative patents. Notably, we find that stronger enforcement of noncompetition agreements impedes innovation for firms facing intense industry labor mobility. High-powered, equity-based compensation positively moderates the relationship between noncompetition enforcement and innovation, but only for the quality of innovation.


Venture Capital: An International Journal of Entrepreneurial Finance | 2009

Delaware Incorporation Matters for New Ventures: Evidence from Venture Capital Investment and the Going Public Process

Maya Waisman; Haizhi Wang; Robert Wuebker

In the United States, corporate actors choose their state of incorporation and are subject to the laws of the state in which they are incorporated. Incorporating in Delaware is a common move for most US firms, especially those interested in attracting venture capital, as the states corporation laws are clearer, more fully defined and business friendly, courts have more experience judging corporate cases, antitakeover laws are less restrictive, and financing or merger deals are more quick and efficient than in most other states. Using a large sample of privately held companies, we empirically investigate the implications of Delaware incorporation and examine its effect on access to VC financing and the process of going public. The results suggest that companies incorporated in Delaware receive more venture financing and attract more involvement from different venture capitalists than entrepreneurial firms incorporated elsewhere. In addition, we find that Delaware incorporated venture-backed firms are more likely to reach the stage of going public, get to that stage faster, and generate more IPO proceeds or higher acquisition values than similar firms incorporated elsewhere. Overall, our study reveals the first empirical evidence about the importance of state laws to privately held, informationally opaque firms seeking venture capital support.


Economic Notes | 2017

Bank Market Power and Loan Contracts: Empirical Evidence

Iftekhar Hasan; Liuling Liu; Haizhi Wang; Xinting Zhen

Using a sample of syndicated loan facilities granted to US corporate borrowers from 1987 to 2013, we directly gauge the lead banks’ market power, and test its effects on both price and non-price terms in loan contracts. We find that bank market power is positively correlated with loan spreads, and the positive relation holds for both non-relationship loans and relationship loans. In particular, we report that, for relationship loans, lending banks charge lower loan price for borrowing firms with lower switching cost. We further employ a framework accommodating the joint determination of loan contractual terms, and document that the lead banks’ market power is positively correlated with collateral and negatively correlated with loan maturity. In addition, we report a significant and negative relationship between banking power and the number of covenants in loan contracts, and the negative relationship is stronger for relationship loans.


Archive | 2016

Do Social Networks Encourage Risk-Taking? Evidence from Bank CEOs

Yiwei Fang; Iftekhar Hasan; Liuling Liu; Haizhi Wang

This paper investigates the impact of CEO’s social network on bank risk and observes a significant positive association. Adopting a difference-in-difference approach, using deaths and retirements within networks, it confirms that the findings are causal. It also reports that well-connected bank CEOs take more risk when more of their social ties are linked to informationally opaque firms and when the labor market offers fewer employment options. In addition, diversity of social ties (professional and educational) helps to mitigate the impact on risk. Finally, it reveals an inefficient trade-off between bank risk and return, suggesting that executive social networks lead to excessive bank risk.


International Journal of Banking, Accounting and Finance | 2016

Venture capital investment, regional innovation and new business creation: a research note

Douglas Dyer; Iftekhar Hasan; Haizhi Wang; Desheng Yin

Entrepreneurship involves mobilising resources in the founding of new businesses to pursue entrepreneurial opportunities. Resource acquisition, especially of financial resource, is crucial for bringing innovative ideas into reality. Though the role of venture capital, as a specialised and important intermediary, in financing innovative entrepreneurial companies is widely recognised, relatively little evidence shows the real effects of venture capital investment. This paper empirically examines the real effects of venture capital investment on regional innovation and new firm creation in the USA. Overall, the results confirm a significant and positive role of venture capital investment in promoting innovation and fostering entrepreneurship.


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2015

Covenants not to Compete: The Ties that Stifle Productivity!

Smriti Anand; Iftekhar Hasan; Priyanka Sharma; Haizhi Wang

Covenants not to compete (CNCs) are frequently used by many businesses in an attempt to impede the departure of their human capital and continually retain their competitive edge. However, empirical...


The Journal of Investing | 2012

Do Bondholders Care about Managerial Stability? Evidence from the Financial Services Industry

Wei Du; Maya Waisman; Haizhi Wang; Mingming Zhou

Using new bond issues in the financial services industry, this study examines whether and to what extent the capital markets recognize the risk associated with the mobility of human capital. We evaluate the state-by-state variations in the enforceability of noncompetition agreements in the United States to test the market-discipline hypothesis and find a significant negative relation between the degree of enforcement of noncompetition agreements and the yield spreads for bonds issued by financial institutions. We also find that the negative relation is more prominent for investment-grade bonds and bonds with long-term maturities. In addition, we find that investors care more about managerial stability when bond issuers have weak protection of shareholder rights. Given the extreme importance of human capital in the financial services industry and the heightened turnover rate in the industry, our study sheds further light on the importance of intangible assets in shaping the perception of firm risk. Moreover, our paper also establishes another robust link between law and finance in the sense that the regulatory environment has a significant effect on the cost of debt for financial firms.

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Bill B. Francis

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Liuling Liu

Bowling Green State University

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Mingming Zhou

University of Colorado Colorado Springs

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Priyanka Sharma

Illinois Institute of Technology

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Smriti Anand

Illinois Institute of Technology

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Yiwei Fang

Illinois Institute of Technology

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Desheng Yin

East China Normal University

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