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Sanctions in an Interconnected World: Firms as Collateral Damage from Institutional Disruption

Publication: Chapter in book/Conference proceedingContribution to conference proceedings

Abstract

Sanctions are supranational institutions that disrupt firms’ cross-border business operations. They change the rules and norms that govern firms’ global operations. We propose that such interruption of national, multilateral, or supranational institutions affects all multinational firms—not only those incorporated in the sanctions’ target or source countries through different types of exposures (i.e., source, target, third country). Further, we show that the effect of sanctions is contingent on the context in which they unfold. We test our hypotheses on stock-market reactions to sanctions announced after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Our results indicate that sanctions negatively affect firms with exposure to the target country, or if a broad coalition of countries announces the sanctions. Firms without a target or source exposure appear to benefit from market capture and experience positive abnormal returns.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAcademy of Management Proceedings
PublisherAcademy of Management
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2024
EventAcademy of Management Conference - Chicago, United States
Duration: 9 Aug 202413 Aug 2024

Publication series

SeriesAcademy of Management Proceedings
Number1
Volume2024
ISSN0065-0668

Conference

ConferenceAcademy of Management Conference
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityChicago
Period9/08/2413/08/24

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