Three Essays on Empirical Corporate Finance
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
He, QiyangAbstract
This thesis consists of three empirical corporate finance studies. The first examines the impact of
U.S. EPA enforcement on corporate green innovation. We find that EPA-enforced firms significantly
increase green innovation output due to higher efficiency and greater hiring of ...
See moreThis thesis consists of three empirical corporate finance studies. The first examines the impact of U.S. EPA enforcement on corporate green innovation. We find that EPA-enforced firms significantly increase green innovation output due to higher efficiency and greater hiring of green inventors. This effect is stronger in states for firms headquartered in states with stronger environmental enforcement intensity, firms with higher institutional ownership, and those with fewer financial constraints. Green innovations further help firms avoid future EPA actions and reduce toxic emissions. The second study employs FinBERT to develop a labor-shortage exposure measure. We validate this measure by showing that states with higher labor-shortage exposure experience lower future unemployment but higher wage growth and labor market tightness. while firms with higher exposure have greater growth in future per-employee staff expenses. Firms with labor-shortage exposure experience lower earnings call CARs, lower stock returns, and reduced operating performance. Firms mitigate these effects by substituting labor with capital and R&D investments, and by producing more process patents, which help offset negative performance impacts. The third study constructs a novel patent utilization measure using FastText, capturing the extent to which a firm’s patent portfolio contributes to new product development. We find that new products backed by more patents yield higher announcement returns, while firms with higher patent utilization rates experience future better new product development, market share growth, profitability, and valuation. These effects are primarily driven by high-value patents and are stronger in competitive markets. We address endogeneity concerns using R&D tax credits as instruments and demonstrate robust findings across various tests.
See less
See moreThis thesis consists of three empirical corporate finance studies. The first examines the impact of U.S. EPA enforcement on corporate green innovation. We find that EPA-enforced firms significantly increase green innovation output due to higher efficiency and greater hiring of green inventors. This effect is stronger in states for firms headquartered in states with stronger environmental enforcement intensity, firms with higher institutional ownership, and those with fewer financial constraints. Green innovations further help firms avoid future EPA actions and reduce toxic emissions. The second study employs FinBERT to develop a labor-shortage exposure measure. We validate this measure by showing that states with higher labor-shortage exposure experience lower future unemployment but higher wage growth and labor market tightness. while firms with higher exposure have greater growth in future per-employee staff expenses. Firms with labor-shortage exposure experience lower earnings call CARs, lower stock returns, and reduced operating performance. Firms mitigate these effects by substituting labor with capital and R&D investments, and by producing more process patents, which help offset negative performance impacts. The third study constructs a novel patent utilization measure using FastText, capturing the extent to which a firm’s patent portfolio contributes to new product development. We find that new products backed by more patents yield higher announcement returns, while firms with higher patent utilization rates experience future better new product development, market share growth, profitability, and valuation. These effects are primarily driven by high-value patents and are stronger in competitive markets. We address endogeneity concerns using R&D tax credits as instruments and demonstrate robust findings across various tests.
See less
Date
2025Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
The University of Sydney Business School, Discipline of FinanceDepartment, Discipline or Centre
FinanceAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare