The Role of Gold in the New Financial Architecture

Author(s):  
Nasser Saidi ◽  
Fabio Scacciavillani
Author(s):  
Irina Ivashkovskaya ◽  
Sergei Evdokimov

Each company operates within the framework of interrelated structures: ownership, corporate governance and capital structure. The particular combination of these dimensions determines the corporate financial architecture of the company. Despite the growing body of literature on the challenges of the knowledge economy to the structural dimensions of companies, still little is known about the financial architecture of innovative firms. At the same time it is widely recognized that such companies substantially differ from traditional types of businesses in their business models and dynamics. Meanwhile, the financial architecture of a company generates the distribution of the incentives to enhance innovations affecting interests and risk-sharing among stakeholders. To address the lack of research into the interaction of corporate structures and their distinct features in innovative companies, this paper aims at identifying the robust financial architecture patterns of innovative companies. Using a sample of more than 1,300 publicly traded US-based manufacturing companies, we use an agglomerative hierarchical clustering method to identify relevant patterns and compare them to the firms which are not considered to be ‘knowledge intensive’. The empirical results allow the identification of seven robust financial architecture patterns within innovative companies. Our findings show that the first major difference between the financial architecture of innovative and non-innovative firms is in the higher role of activist institutional investors in the ownership. The second notable difference is related to CEO-duality, which plays a significant role in corporate governance only in innovative firms. Moreover, innovative companies are less leveraged than non-innovative firms. In addition, mature innovative companies demonstrate better financial performance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Нanna Telnova

Turbulent global processes, driven by the slowdown in the economy growing, including developed countries, require further understanding of the role of financial factors, the heterogeneous impact of which is conditioned by the globalization of financial markets. The analysis of existing conceptual approaches to economic growth allows identifying bottlenecks of the national financial architecture and specifying positive aspects of successful development. The study proved the need to generalize the provisions of the Keynesian and neo-liberal theory (avoiding unipolar compositions financial architecture), supplementing them with recommendations for implementing financial dirigisme in the face of economic shocks. Given the need to transform national financial policies, the focus is on creating conditions for development of the real economy, as a main source of economic growth, through the government support.


2019 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 1103-1121
Author(s):  
Nicole Cerpa Vielma ◽  
Hasan Cömert ◽  
Carmela D’Avino ◽  
Gary Dymski ◽  
Annina Kaltenbrunner ◽  
...  

Abstract Disagreements over the systemic implications—the future—of financialization can be traced in part to the absence of sustained attention to the role of banking firms in driving this secular shift forward. That is, the financialization literature lacks an adequate microfoundation. Accounting for the drivers of financialization processes solely at the macro level overlooks the problems of how these processes came about and whether they are sustainable. This paper addresses this explanatory gap, arguing that a key independent microeconomic driver of increasing financialization did exist: the incessant efforts by money-centre banks in the USA to break out of Depression-era restrictions on their size, activities, and markets. These banks’ growth strategies in turbulent times led to an institutional (meso) shift—the rise of a megabank-centred shadow banking system—that now shapes global financial architecture even while operating in ways that are unsustainable. In short, too-big-to-manage megabanks are at the heart of the fragility and instability of the economy today.


Author(s):  
Achoub leila, Ghedabna lilia Achoub leila, Ghedabna lilia

  In light of the increasing interest and development of Islamic financial architecture, especially after the 2008 mortgage crisis and its innovative products and financial instruments such as Islamic Sukuk, , Not to mention its important and large role in reducing the big difference between the financial economy and the real economy, we decided In our research, to study the role of Islamic sukuk in dealing with the global financial crisis 2008, by studying the state of Malaysia, especially as the latter is among the first countries in the field of Islamic financial market activity.    


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