Bachelorarbeit, 2007
68 Seiten, Note: 1,0
1. Introduction
1.1 Problem and Objective of the Paper
1.2 Organization of the Paper
2. Definitions and Basic Principles
2.1 Definitions
2.2 Knowledge-based View and Asymmetric Information
2.2.1 Theoretical Impact of Asymmetric Informatio
2.2.2 Value Creation in the Light of the Knowledge-based View
2.3 Legal Regulations and Institutional Settings in Germany
2.3.1 Insider Trading
2.3.1.1 Illegal Insider Trading
2.3.1.2 Director Dealings
2.3.2 Patent Application Process and Publication
3. Director Dealings on Knowledge of Imminent Breakthroughs
3.1 Classical Rent Appropriation through Insider Trading
3.1.1 Director Dealings as Anti-Cyclical Investing
3.1.2 Abnormal Returns around Announcements
3.2 Research and Development as Instrument for Rent Appropriation
3.2.1 Research and Development, Patents, and the Value of a Firm
3.2.2 Managerial Foresight on Corporate Research and Development
3.3 Patent Application and Director Dealings
3.3.1 Measuring the Scope of a Patent
3.3.2 Abnormal Returns of Director Dealings on Patent Activity
4. Empirical Study
4.1 Sample Data
4.1.1 Director Dealings Sample
4.1.2 Patent Sample
4.1.3 Share and Index Return Sample
4.1.4 Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Sample
4.1.5 Matching Director Dealings, Share and Index Return, and Patent Sample
4.1.6 Dependent Variables
4.1.7 Independent Variables
4.1.8 Control Variables
4.2 Methodology
4.2.1 Organization of the Study
4.2.2 Long-Horizon Event Study
4.2.3 Short-Horizon Event Study
4.2.4 Regression Analysis
4.3 Results
4.3.1 Abnormal Returns after Director Dealings on Patent Applications
4.3.2 Abnormal Returns after Patent Publication
4.3.3 Long-Run Abnormal Returns after Director Dealings and the Impact of Patent Publication
5. Discussion and Implications
This thesis investigates whether corporate insiders in Germany generate abnormal returns by trading shares of their own companies based on private knowledge of imminent technological breakthroughs, specifically using patent applications as an indicator of such breakthroughs. The study aims to empirically prove a link between these internal innovations and the profitability of director dealings.
3.3.2 Abnormal Returns of Director Dealings on Patent Activity
While the “value” or “importance” of a patent is rarely known by the market at the time of patent publication, an even higher degree of information asymmetry exists before a patent application is published by the patent office.
Generally, there is a considerable period in which senior management has intimate knowledge that: (1) there has been a scientific breakthrough, (2) a patent has been applied for, and (3) the patent may be an important building block for future innovation. While a given patent may be stuck in bureaucracy for years, management may have a strong notion of its ultimate importance at the outset (Ahuja et al., 2005, p. 795).
Consequently, insiders will be able to achieve abnormal returns by investing privately on their informational advantage. This phenomenon can be observed the best in the case of corporate directors, who are required to report their trading of shares of their own firm to an according institution. Different studies have already provided evidence that this kind of rent appropriation exists and that directors earn abnormal returns.
1. Introduction: This chapter defines the research problem regarding the valuation of patents and the motivation for insiders to trade based on non-public knowledge of imminent breakthroughs.
2. Definitions and Basic Principles: This section provides the theoretical framework regarding information asymmetry, the resource-based view, and the legal environment for insider trading and patent applications in Germany.
3. Director Dealings on Knowledge of Imminent Breakthroughs: This chapter reviews literature on rent appropriation via insider trading and links R&D/patent activity to corporate firm value and managerial foresight.
4. Empirical Study: This chapter outlines the data selection, methodology, and results of the event studies and regression analysis conducted to identify abnormal returns.
5. Discussion and Implications: This chapter synthesizes the findings, acknowledges the limitations of the empirical approach, and offers conclusions regarding the informational value of patent applications for insiders versus outsiders.
Director Dealings, Insider Trading, Patent Applications, R&D, Abnormal Returns, Information Asymmetry, Knowledge-based View, Event Study, Market Efficiency, Rent Appropriation, Patent Importance, Corporate Governance, Germany, Financial Performance, Innovation.
The research explores whether corporate insiders utilize private knowledge of impending patent applications and technological breakthroughs to secure abnormal returns through trading their own company's stock.
The core themes include information asymmetry, the impact of R&D on stock performance, the legal reporting requirements for German corporate directors, and the empirical measurement of abnormal returns.
The research asks if director dealings are informative and if they specifically capitalize on knowledge regarding future patent breakthroughs before these are disclosed to the general market.
The study employs a multi-step quantitative approach: a long-horizon event study to measure abnormal returns and a short-horizon event study to assess patent importance, followed by a regression analysis to determine dependencies.
The main part addresses the theoretical relationship between R&D and insider gains, the mechanisms of rent appropriation, and the specific empirical analysis of German stock market data from 2002 to 2007.
Key terms include Director Dealings, Information Asymmetry, Patent Applications, R&D, Abnormal Returns, and Rent Appropriation.
In the absence of citation data for very recent patents, the study assumes that the level of abnormal returns following the publication of a patent application acts as a proxy for the patent's perceived importance.
The law mandates the reporting of director dealings (BaFin database), which provides the raw data for analyzing whether these transactions consistently outperform market benchmarks.
It tests the long-term profitability of insider trades that occur significantly before the official publication of patent applications, bridging the gap between R&D progress and market pricing.
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