62 research outputs found
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Mitigation of Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection in Venture Capital Financing: The Influence of the Country’s Institutional Setting
A venture capitalist (VC) needs to trade off benefits and costs when attempting to mitigate agency problems in their investor-investee relationship. We argue that signals of ventures complement the VC’s capacity to screen and conduct a due diligence during the pre-investment phase, but its attractiveness may diminish in institutional settings supporting greater transparency. Similarly, whereas a VC may opt for contractual covenants to curb potential opportunism by ventures in the post-investment phase, this may only be effective in settings supportive of shareholder rights enforcement. Using an international sample of VC contracts, our study finds broad support for these conjectures. It delineates theoretical and practical implications for how investors can best deploy their capital in different institutional settings whilst nurturing their relationships with entrepreneurs
Individual Preferences and Social Interactions Determine the Aggregation of Woodlice
n°e17389.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Relocation to get venture capital : a resource dependence perspective
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE via the DOI in this record.Using a resource dependence perspective, we theorize and show that non-venture-capital-backed ventures founded in U.S. states with a lower availability of venture capital (VC) are more likely to relocate to California (CA) or Massachusetts (MA)—the two VC richest states—compared to ventures founded in states with a greater availability of VC. Moreover, controlling for self-selection, ventures that relocate to CA or MA subsequently have a greater probability of attracting initial VC compared to ventures that stay in their home state. We discuss the implications for theory, future research, and practice
Batch Binary Weierstrass
Bitslicing is a programming technique that offers several attractive features,
such as timing attack resistance, high amortized performance in batch
computation, and architecture independence. On the symmetric crypto side, this
technique sees wide real-world deployment, in particular for block ciphers with
naturally parallel modes. However, the asymmetric side lags in application,
seemingly due to the rigidity of the batch computation requirement. In this
paper, we build on existing bitsliced binary field arithmetic results to develop
a tool that optimizes performance of binary fields at any size on a given
architecture. We then provide an ECC layer, with support for arbitrary binary
curves. Finally, we integrate into our novel dynamic OpenSSL engine,
transparently exposing the batch results to the OpenSSL library and linking
applications to achieve significant performance and security gains for key pair
generation, ECDSA signing, and (half of) ECDH across a wide range of curves,
both standardized and non-standard
Formation, Recovery and Characterization of FePO<sub>4</sub> Synthesized with the Use of Apoferritin
Abstract not Available.</jats:p
Escalation of commitment in venture capital decision making: Differentiating between domestic and international investors
Drawing upon an escalation of commitment framework, this study investigates how differences between cross-border and domestic venture capital investors in emotional, social, and institutional factors affect their decision to terminate an unsuccessful investment. We track the exit outcome of 1060 venture capital investments in 684 European technology companies. Results show that domestic investors have a high tendency to escalate their commitment to a failing course of action, while cross-border investors terminate their investments efficiently, even when investing through a local branch. This is explained by cross-border investors having a lower social and emotional involvement with the project and a lower embeddedness in the local economic and social environment, decreasing individual decision biases. Further, they are affected to a lower extent by normative pressures to further invest from their co-investment network. Local branches of cross-border investors are also shielded from escalation of commitment. We conjecture that their international investment committee acts as an organizational safeguard against individual decision biases. Domestic investors may hence benefit from mimicking the behavior of cross-border investors
CROSS-BORDER VENTURE CAPITAL AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF PORTFOLIO COMPANIES
This paper studies how cross-border venture capital investors as opposed to domestic venture capital investors influence the development of their portfolio companies. For this purpose, we use a longitudinal research design and track sales from the year of initial venture capital investment up to seven years after this investment in 692 European technology-based companies. Findings demonstrate how companies backed by cross-border venture capital investors initially exhibit lower sales growth compared to companies backed by domestic investors. After a couple of years, however, companies backed by cross-border investors exhibit higher sales growth compared to companies backed by domestic investors. Finally, companies that raise finance from a syndicate comprising both domestic and cross-border investors develop into the biggest sales generators. Overall, this study provides a more textured understanding of the role played by venture capital investors as their portfolio companies develop and thereby require different resources or capabilities over time.venture capital, cross-border, international, portfolio company development
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