Institutional investor

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    Institutional investors are any organizations or persons which collect quite number sums of money to invest in securities and also control a collection of share amounts to qualify for special treatment and less regulation. They can also include operating companies that decide to invest their profits to some degree in these types of assets. Insurance companies, mutual funds and pension funds are some examples of institutional investors. These institutional investors need to face some regulations.

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    Institutional investors are any organizations or persons which collect quite number sums of money to invest in securities and also control a collection of share amounts to qualify for special treatment and less regulation. They can also include operating companies that decide to invest their profits to some degree in these types of assets. Insurance companies, mutual funds and pension funds are some examples of institutional investors. These institutional investors need to face some regulations.

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    fraction of corporate equity owned by institutional investors has grown considerably in the past several decades; institutional holding of shares in U.S. equities has increased from approximately 16% in 1965 to over 50% in 2010 (Federal Reserve Board, 2011). The fact that institutional investors are managing such a sizable wealth invested in U.S. equity market has potential important role in term of setting market prices. The growing impact of institutional investors on capital markets has induced to

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    Student ID : CGSSO00015316 Student Name : Abdisamad Abdullahi Abdulle Course Code : BMCF5103 Course Name : Corporate finance Program : Master Of Business Administration MBA Semester : Five Assignment : Answers Facilitator : Ibraahim Moh’ud Hamud Date due : 12 Nov, 2014 Submission Date : 12 Nov, 2014 1.0 QUESTIO N ONE 1.1 Introduction 3 1.2 Value maximization and other goals 3 1.3 Customer and

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    differences and the reasons why they exist as well as why they are likely to persist in the foreseeable future. My analysis and comparison are conducted at a fairly high level to emphasise that reporting regulation is a part of a country’s broader institutional framework. Throughout the paper, I give special emphasis to enforcement issues because of two related reasons. *The author is the J. Sondheimer Professor of International Economics, Finance and Accounting at the University of Chicago Booth School

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    Edward Jones in 2006

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    Executive Summary This memorandum addresses some of the key issues with Edward Jones, which includes the lack of an online presence, possible cannibalization from larger firms, and the inability to manage funds from institutional investors. I conclude that the most effective of all of the theorized strategies would be a combination of Edward Jones’ original business model with an online platform. This plan would allow Edward Jones to stay true to its fundamentals, as well as attract new clientele

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    Impact on Non HFT institutional investors There is a severe variation of capital at risk of high frequency trading when compared to capita at risk for institutional investors as noted by KF&Y. Capital at risk is the total amount of capital that an organization deploys in all of its market positions at any specific point of time, as defined by IRRC institute. A high frequency trader generally keeps its capital at risk negligible. Although, HFT companies contributes for nearly 65% by volume in equities

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    result appears to contradict pre-existing research that argues that short-term investors influence managers to pursue corporate policies that are sub-optimal. However, Giannetti and Yu argue their results are consistent with the prior research, which implicitly assume a static environment, as it is only under negative shocks that companies benefit from short-term institutional ownership. That is, short-term investors motivate companies to react much faster to adverse shocks leading to better performance

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    The institutional investor, who has owned significant amount of investment concern with monitoring duties of management, as they gain benefit from it. They require high quality of information and have a power to carry out financial analysis. Their monitoring role become important since there is increase in agency conflict between managers and shareholders. The institutional investor tend to pressure manager in order to protect shareholder interest. Since the institutional investor need to control

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    broken the ice and given the investor a killer elevator pitch on your business idea. You’ve hooked them in with your idea and the possible gains the investor might enjoy by hopping on board. So, what now? Just hand over the checkbook? Well, not quite. You now have to delve deeper to drawing in the investor and impressing them with a pitch deck. In the first part of this guide, I’ve introduced you to the concept of pitch deck and the best time to present it to investors. Let’s now turn attention

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