Ban, Boom, and Echo! Entrepreneurship and initial coin offerings
Bellavitis, C; Cumming, D; Vanacker, T
Date: 24 August 2020
Journal
Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Regulatory spillovers occur when regulation in one country affects either the expected regulatory
approach and/or entrepreneurial finance markets in other countries. Drawing on institutional
theory, we investigate the global implications of a regulatory spillover on entrepreneurship. We
argue that regulatory spillovers have both ...
Regulatory spillovers occur when regulation in one country affects either the expected regulatory
approach and/or entrepreneurial finance markets in other countries. Drawing on institutional
theory, we investigate the global implications of a regulatory spillover on entrepreneurship. We
argue that regulatory spillovers have both short- and long-term effects on the number and quality
of entrepreneurial finance initiatives such as Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs). Based on a large-scale
sample of ICOs in 108 countries, we find that a regulatory ban of ICOs in one country causes a
short-term increase in the number of low-rated ICOs in other countries and a long-term drop in the
number of ICOs, especially low-rated, which increases the average ICO rating. That is, a restrictive
regulation triggered a process of increased market selection.
Management
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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