@article{dai2017hedge,title={Hedge funds in M\&A deals: Is there exploitation of insider information?},author={Dai, Rui and Massoud, Nadia and Nandy, Debarshi K and Saunders, Anthony},journal={Journal of Corporate Finance},volume={47},pages={23--45},year={2017},publisher={Elsevier}}
@article{dai2021socially,title={Socially responsible corporate customers},author={Dai, Rui and Liang, Hao and Ng, Lilian},journal={Journal of Financial Economics},volume={142},number={2},pages={598--626},year={2021},publisher={Elsevier},}
CIKM
Form 10-q itemization
Zhang, Yanci, Du, Tianming, Sun, Yujie, Donohue, Lawrence, and Dai, Rui
In Proceedings of the 30th ACM International Conference on Information & Knowledge Management 2021
@inproceedings{zhang2021form,title={Form 10-q itemization},author={Zhang, Yanci and Du, Tianming and Sun, Yujie and Donohue, Lawrence and Dai, Rui},booktitle={Proceedings of the 30th ACM International Conference on Information \& Knowledge Management},pages={4817--4822},year={2021}}
JMCB
International Lending: The Role of Lender’s Home Country
Beyhaghi, Mehdi, Dai, Rui, Saunders, Anthony, and Wald, John
@article{beyhaghi2021international,title={International Lending: The Role of Lender's Home Country},author={Beyhaghi, Mehdi and Dai, Rui and Saunders, Anthony and Wald, John},journal={Journal of Money, Credit and Banking},volume={53},number={6},pages={1373--1416},year={2021},publisher={Wiley Online Library}}
JCF
Do short sellers anticipate late filings?
Dai, Rui, Li, Ting, Zaiats, Nataliya, and Zhao, Xinlei
@article{dai2021short,title={Do short sellers anticipate late filings?},author={Dai, Rui and Li, Ting and Zaiats, Nataliya and Zhao, Xinlei},journal={Journal of Corporate Finance},volume={69},pages={102045},year={2021},publisher={Elsevier}}
@article{dai2022short,title={Short seller attention},author={Dai, Rui and Ng, Lilian and Zaiats, Nataliya},journal={Journal of Corporate Finance},volume={72},pages={102149},year={2022},publisher={Elsevier}}
RoF
Dissemination, Publication, and Impact of Finance Research: When Novelty Meets Conventionality
Dai, Rui, Donohue, Lawrence, Drechsler, Qingyi (Freda), and Jiang, Wei
Using numeric and textual data extracted from over 50,000 finance articles in Social Science Research Network (SSRN) during 2001–19, we examine the relationship between measured qualities and a paper’s readership, eventual outlet, and impact. Conventionality (semantic similarity with existent research) helps boost readership and publication prospects. However, novelty in the forms of emerging topics and databases are associated with better publishing outcomes. Studies that do not easily map into established finance subfields or that introduce nonfinance elements face a higher hurdle. Finally, papers whose research questions span multiple fields are a hard sell, but those building on prior knowledge from multiple fields are valued.
@article{10.1093/rof/rfac018,author={Dai, Rui and Donohue, Lawrence and Drechsler, Qingyi (Freda) and Jiang, Wei},title={{Dissemination, Publication, and Impact of Finance Research: When Novelty Meets Conventionality}},journal={Review of Finance},year={2022},month=mar,issn={1572-3097},doi={10.1093/rof/rfac018},url={https://doi.org/10.1093/rof/rfac018},note={rfac018},}