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What Is the Cost of Privatization for Workers? J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-31
MARTIN OLSSON, JOACIM TÅGPrivatization of state‐owned enterprises is on the agenda across the globe. Using Swedish data covering two decades, we show that productivity gains and headcount reductions are associated with economic costs for incumbent workers. Workers experience income losses and higher unemployment, but half of the losses are covered by the social safety net. We also find small positive effects on entrepreneurship
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Regulating Over‐the‐Counter Markets J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-30
TOMY LEE, CHAOJUN WANGOver‐the‐counter (OTC) trading thrives despite competition from exchanges. We let OTC dealers cream skim from exchanges in an otherwise standard Glosten and Milgrom framework. Restricting the dealer's ability to cream skim induces “cheap substitution”: some traders exit while others with larger gains from trade enter. Cheap substitution implies trading costs, trade volumes, and market shares are poor
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The Value of Bank Lending J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
THOMAS FLANAGANUsing a novel data set of realized syndicated loan cash flows and a risk‐adjustment methodology adapted from the private equity literature, I provide a measure of risk‐adjusted returns for bank loan cash flows. Banks, on average, generate 180 basis points in gross risk‐adjusted returns and add $75 million of value annually to their loan portfolios. Banks earn higher returns when they lend to financially
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The Term Structure of Interest Rates in a Heterogeneous Monetary Union J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
JAMES COSTAIN, GALO NUÑO, CARLOS THOMASWe build an arbitrage‐based model of the yield curves in a heterogeneous monetary union with sovereign default risk, which accounts for the asymmetric shifts in euro‐area yields during the Covid‐19 pandemic. We derive an affine term structure solution, and decompose yields into expectations, term premium, expected default loss, and credit risk premium components. In an extension, we endogenize the
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Interlocking Directorates and Competition in Banking J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
GUGLIELMO BARONE, FABIANO SCHIVARDI, ENRICO SETTEWe study the effects on corporate loan rates of an unexpected change in the Italian legislation that forbade interlocking directorates between banks. Exploiting multiple firm‐bank relationships to fully account for all unobserved heterogeneity, we find that prohibiting interlocks decreased the interest rates of previously interlocked banks by 14 basis points relative to other banks. The effect is stronger
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Would Order‐By‐Order Auctions Be Competitive? J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-14
THOMAS ERNST, CHESTER SPATT, JIAN SUNWe model two methods of executing segregated retail orders: brokers' routing, whereby brokers allocate orders using the market maker's overall performance, and order‐by‐order auctions, where market makers bid on individual orders, a recent U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission proposal. Order‐by‐order auctions improve allocative efficiency, but face a winner's curse reducing retail investor welfare
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AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-14
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ISSUE INFORMATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-14
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Women in Charge: Evidence from Hospitals J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-26
KATHARINA LEWELLENThe paper examines the decision‐making, compensation, and turnover of female CEOs in U.S. hospitals. Contrary to the literature on lower‐ranked executives and directors in public firms, there is no evidence that gender differences in preferences for risk or altruism affect decision‐making of hospital CEOs: corporate policies do not shift when women take (or leave) office, and male and female CEOs respond
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Dynamic Banking and the Value of Deposits J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-24
PATRICK BOLTON, YE LI, NENG WANG, JINQIANG YANGWe propose a theory of banking in which banks cannot perfectly control deposit flows. Facing uninsurable loan and deposit shocks, banks dynamically manage lending, wholesale funding, deposits, and equity. Deposits create value by lowering funding costs. However, when the bank is undercapitalized and at risk of breaching leverage requirements, the marginal value of deposits can turn negative as deposit
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Is the United States a Lucky Survivor? A Hierarchical Bayesian Approach J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
JULES VAN BINSBERGEN, SOPHIA HUA, JONAS PEETERS, JESSICA WACHTERUsing international data, we quantify the magnitude of survivorship bias in U.S. equity market performance, finding that it explains about one‐third of the equity risk premium in the past century. We model the subjective crash belief of an investor who infers the crash risk in the United States by cross‐learning from other countries. The U.S. crash probability shows a persistent and widening divergence
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Raising Capital from Investor Syndicates with Strategic Communication J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
DAN LUOAn entrepreneur makes offers to multiple investors to fund a project that requires a minimum investment. Concerned about other investors' decisions, each investor strategically communicates information about the project to others. When investors have conflicts of interest, those with contractually stronger incentives to invest attempt to persuade others to invest. Depending on the project's ex ante
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Are CEOs Rewarded for Luck? Evidence from Corporate Tax Windfalls J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
MARTINA ANDREANI, ATIF ELLAHIE, LAKSHMANAN SHIVAKUMARFocusing on the one‐off tax gains and losses (i.e., windfalls) associated with the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, we reexamine whether CEOs are rewarded for luck. We find that weakly monitored CEOs are compensated for the windfall tax gains but not penalized for the corresponding tax losses. No such pattern is observed for CEOs facing greater pay scrutiny. The pay for windfalls cannot be explained as
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How Much Does Racial Bias Affect Mortgage Lending? Evidence from Human and Algorithmic Credit Decisions J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-09
NEIL BHUTTA, AUREL HIZMO, DANIEL RINGOWe assess racial discrimination in mortgage approvals using confidential data on mortgage applications. Minority applicants tend to have lower credit scores and higher leverage, and are less likely to receive algorithmic approval from race-blind automated underwriting systems (AUS). Observable applicant-risk factors explain most of the racial disparities in lender denials. Further, exploiting the AUS
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Conflicting Priorities: A Theory of Covenants and Collateral J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-09
JASON RODERICK DONALDSON, DENIS GROMB, GIORGIA PIACENTINOWe develop a theory of secured debt, unsecured debt, and debt with anti-dilution covenants. We assume that, as in practice, covenants convey the right to accelerate if violated, but the new secured debt retains its priority even if issued in violation of covenants. We find that such covenants are nonetheless useful: They provide state-contingent financing flexibility, balancing over- and underinvestment
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Social Security and Trends in Wealth Inequality J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-07
SYLVAIN CATHERINE, MAX MILLER, NATASHA SARINRecent influential work finds large increases in inequality in the United States based on measures of wealth concentration that notably exclude the value of social insurance programs. This paper shows that top wealth shares have not changed much over the last three decades when Social Security is properly accounted for. This is because Social Security wealth increased substantially from $7.2 trillion
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Auctions versus Negotiations: The Role of the Payment Structure J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-07
FLORIAN HOFFMANN, VLADIMIR VLADIMIROVWe investigate a seller's strategic choice between optimally structured negotiations with fewer bidders and an auction with more competing bidders when payments can have a contingent component, as is common in mergers and acquisitions (M&A), patent licensing, and employee compensation. The key factor favoring negotiations is that it allows the seller to set her preferred payment structure—that is,
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Venture Capital and Startup Agglomeration J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-03
JUN CHEN, MICHAEL EWENSThis paper examines venture capital's (VC) role in the geographic clustering of high‐growth startups. We exploit a rule change that disproportionately impacted U.S. regions that historically lacked VC financing via a restriction of banks to invest in the asset class. A one‐standard‐deviation increase in VCs' exposure to the rule led to a 20% decline in fund size and a 10% decrease in the likelihood
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In the Red: Overdrafts, Payday Lending, and the Underbanked J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-31
MARCO DI MAGGIO, ANGELA MA, EMILY WILLIAMSThe reordering of transactions from “high-to-low” is a controversial bank practice thought to maximize fees paid by low-income customers on overdrawn accounts. We exploit a series of class-action lawsuits that mandated that some banks cease the practice. Using alternative credit bureau data, we find that after banks cease high-to-low reordering, low-income individuals reduce payday borrowing, increase
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Collusion in Brokered Markets J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
JOHN WILLIAM HATFIELD, SCOTT DUKE KOMINERS, RICHARD LOWERYHigh commissions in the U.S. residential real estate agency market pose a puzzle for economic theory because brokerage is not a concentrated industry. We model brokered markets as a game in which agents post prices for customers and then choose which other agents to work with. We show that there exists an equilibrium in which each agent conditions working with other agents on those agents' posted prices
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ISSUE INFORMATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
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Report of the Editor of The Journal of Finance for the Year 2024 J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
ANTOINETTE SCHOARClick on the article title to read more.
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Report of the EST and of the 2025 Annual Membership Meeting J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
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AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
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Creating Controversy in Proxy Voting Advice J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-17
ANDREY MALENKO, NADYA MALENKO, CHESTER SPATTWe analyze how a profit‐maximizing proxy advisor designs vote recommendations and research reports. The advisor benefits from producing informative, unbiased reports, but only partially informative recommendations, biased against the a priori likely alternative. Such recommendations induce close votes, increasing controversy and thereby the relevance and value of proxy advice. Our results suggest shifting
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Excess Capacity, Marginal q, and Corporate Investment J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-11
GUSTAVO GRULLON, DAVID L. IKENBERRYTheory posits that when managers anticipate excess capacity, average q becomes a biased estimator of marginal q as the potential for underutilizing new capital reduces the marginal benefit of investing. After correcting for this source of measurement error, the explanatory power of Tobin's q substantially improves in time-series and cross-sectional regressions as well as in out-of-sample tests. These
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Intrahousehold Disagreement about Macroeconomic Expectations J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-09
DA KEThis paper highlights the simple fact that households typically consist of multiple members who may hold divergent views, a fact that existing approaches to measuring and modeling household macroeconomic expectations largely abstract from. Using unique data on the macroeconomic expectations of both spouses, I document substantial intrahousehold disagreement about inflation, economic recessions, and
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Banks, Low Interest Rates, and Monetary Policy Transmission J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-09
OLIVIER WANGI study how the secular decline in interest rates affects banks' intermediation spreads and credit supply. Following a permanent decrease in rates, bank lending may rise initially but contracts in the long run. As lower rates compress deposit spreads even well above the zero lower bound, banks' retained earnings, equity, and lending fall until loan spreads have risen enough to offset the reduction
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How Credit Cycles across a Financial Crisis J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
ARVIND KRISHNAMURTHY, TYLER MUIRWe analyze the behavior of credit and output in financial crises using data on credit spreads and credit growth. Crises are marked by a sharp rise in credit spreads, signaling sudden shifts in expectations. The severity of a crisis can be predicted by the extent of credit losses (spread increases) and financial sector fragility (precrisis credit growth). This interaction is a key feature of crises
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In Too Deep: The Effect of Sunk Costs on Corporate Investment J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
MARIUS GUENZELSunk costs are unrecoverable costs that should not affect decision making. I provide evidence that firms systematically fail to ignore sunk costs and that this leads to significant investment distortions. In fixed-exchange-ratio stock mergers, aggregate market fluctuations after parties enter into a binding merger agreement induce plausibly exogenous variation in the final acquisition cost. These quasi-random
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Uncovering the Hidden Effort Problem J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-17
AZI BEN‐REPHAEL, BRUCE I. CARLIN, ZHI DA, RYAN D. ISRAELSENWe analyze minute‐by‐minute Bloomberg online status and study how the effort provision of executives in public corporations affects firm value. While executives spend most of their time doing other activities, patterns of Bloomberg usage allow us to characterize their work habits as measures of effort provision. We document a positive effect of effort on unexpected earnings and cumulative abnormal
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The Impact of Minority Representation at Mortgage Lenders J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-12
W. SCOTT FRAME, RUIDI HUANG, ERICA XUEWEI JIANG, YEONJOON LEE, WILL SHUO LIU, ERIK J. MAYER, ADI SUNDERAMWe study links between the labor market for loan officers and access to mortgage credit. Using novel data matching mortgage applications to loan officers, we find that minorities are underrepresented among loan officers. Minority borrowers are less likely to complete mortgage applications, have completed applications approved, and to ultimately take up a loan. These disparities are reduced when minority
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Repo over the Financial Crisis J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-11
ADAM COPELAND, ANTOINE MARTINThis paper uses new data to provide a comprehensive view of repo activity during the 2007 global financial crisis. We show that activity declined much more in the bilateral segment of the market than in the tri‐party segment. Surprisingly, a large share of the decline in activity is driven by repos backed by Treasury securities. Further, a disproportionate share of the decline in repo activity is connected
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Feedback Effects and Systematic Risk Exposures J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
SNEHAL BANERJEE, BRADYN BREON‐DRISH, KEVIN SMITHWe model the “feedback effect” of a firm's stock price on investment in projects exposed to a systematic risk factor, like climate risk. The stock price reflects information about both the project's cash flows and its discount rate. A cash‐flow‐maximizing manager treats discount rate fluctuations as “noise,” but a price‐maximizing manager interprets such variation as information about the project's
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Wealth and Insurance Choices: Evidence from U.S. Households J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
MICHAEL J. GROPPER, CAMELIA M. KUHNENUsing administrative data for 63,000 individuals across 2,500,000 person‐month observations, we find that wealthier individuals have better life insurance coverage, controlling for the value of the asset insured, namely, the consumption needs of dependents. This positive wealth‐insurance correlation, which is surprising given the prevailing view that wealth substitutes for insurance, persists after
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Regulatory Fragmentation J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
JOSEPH KALMENOVITZ, MICHELLE LOWRY, EKATERINA VOLKOVARegulatory fragmentation occurs when multiple federal agencies oversee a single issue. Using the full text of the Federal Register, the government's official daily publication, we provide the first systematic evidence on the extent and costs of regulatory fragmentation. Fragmentation increases the firm's costs while lowering its productivity, profitability, and growth. Moreover, it deters entry into
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Crisis Interventions in Corporate Insolvency J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-31
SAMUEL ANTILL, CHRISTOPHER CLAYTONWe model the optimal resolution of insolvent firms in general equilibrium. Collateral‐constrained banks lend to (i) solvent firms to finance investments and (ii) distressed firms to avoid liquidation. Liquidations create negative fire‐sale externalities. Liquidations also relieve bank balance–sheet congestion, enabling new firm loans that generate positive collateral externalities by lowering bank
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Designing Stress Scenarios J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-25
CECILIA PARLATORE, THOMAS PHILIPPONWe study the optimal design of stress scenarios. A principal manages the unknown risk exposures of agents by asking them to report losses under hypothetical scenarios before taking remedial actions. We apply a Kalman filter to solve the learning problem, and we relate the optimal design to the risk environment, the principal's preferences, and available interventions. In a banking context, optimal
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ISSUE INFORMATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-23
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AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-23
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The Allocation of Socially Responsible Capital J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-23
DANIEL GREEN, BENJAMIN N. ROTHPortfolio allocation decisions increasingly incorporate social values. We develop a tractable framework to study how competition between investors to own socially valuable assets affects social welfare. Relative to the most common social‐investing strategies, we identify alternative strategies that result in higher impact and higher financial returns. We identify strategies for investors to have impact
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Pricing Poseidon: Extreme Weather Uncertainty and Firm Return Dynamics J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-14
MATHIAS S. KRUTTLI, BRIGITTE ROTH TRAN, SUMUDU W. WATUGALAWe empirically analyze firm‐level uncertainty generated from extreme weather events, guided by a theoretical framework. Stock options of firms with establishments in a hurricane's (forecast) landfall region exhibit large implied volatility increases, reflecting significant uncertainty (before) after impact. Volatility risk premium dynamics reveal that investors underestimate such uncertainty. This
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Simplicity and Risk J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-30
INDIRA PURII introduce and test for preference for simplicity in choice under risk. I characterize the theory axiomatically, and derive its properties and unique predictions relative to canonical models. By designing and running theoretically motivated experiments, I document that people value simplicity in ways not fully captured by existing models that study risk premia in financial markets. Participants' risk
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Sustainability or Greenwashing: Evidence from the Asset Market for Industrial Pollution J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-30
RAN DUCHIN, JANET GAO, QIPING XUWe study the asset market for pollutive plants. Firms divest pollutive plants in response to environmental pressures. Buyers are firms facing weaker environmental pressures that have supply chain relationships or joint ventures with the sellers. While pollution levels do not decline following divestitures, sellers highlight their sustainable policies in subsequent conference calls, earn higher returns
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Sending Out an SMS: Automatic Enrollment Experiments for Overdraft Alerts J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-26
MICHAEL D. GRUBB, DARRAGH KELLY, JEROEN NIEBOER, MATTHEW OSBORNE, JONATHAN SHAWAt-scale field experiments at major U.K. banks show that automatic enrollment into “just-in-time” text alerts reduces unarranged overdraft and unpaid item charges 17% to 19% and arranged overdraft charges 4% to 8%, implying annual market-wide savings of £170 million to £240 million. Incremental benefits from “early-warning” alerts are statistically insignificant, although economically significant effects
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Intermediary Leverage Shocks and Funding Conditions J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-23
JEAN-SÉBASTIEN FONTAINE, RENÉ GARCIA, SERMIN GUNGORThe aggregate leverage of broker-dealers responds to demand and supply disturbances that have opposite effects on financial markets. Specifically, leverage supply shocks that relax broker-dealers' funding constraints increase leverage, liquidity, and returns and carry a positive price of risk, while leverage demand shocks also increase leverage but reduce liquidity and returns and carry a negative
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The Global Credit Spread Puzzle J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-20
JING-ZHI HUANG, YOSHIO NOZAWA, ZHAN SHIWe examine the ability of structural models to predict credit spreads using global default data and security-level credit spread data in eight developed economies. We find that two representative, pure default-risk models tend to underpredict the average credit spreads on investment-grade (IG) bonds, especially their spreads over government bonds, thereby providing evidence for a “global credit spread
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Bank Funding Risk, Reference Rates, and Credit Supply J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-20
HARRY COOPERMAN, DARRELL DUFFIE, STEPHAN LUCK, ZACHRY WANG, YILIN (DAVID) YANGCorporate credit lines are drawn more heavily when funding markets are stressed. This elevates expected bank funding costs. We show that credit supply is dampened by the associated debt-overhang cost to bank shareholders. Until 2022, this impact was reduced by linking the interest paid on lines to a credit-sensitive reference rate like the London interbank offered rate (LIBOR). We show that transition
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The Disappearing Index Effect J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-20
ROBIN GREENWOOD, MARCO SAMMONThe abnormal return associated with a stock being added to the S&P 500 has fallen from an average of 7.4% in the 1990s to less than 1% over the past decade. This has occurred despite a significant increase in the share of stock market assets linked to the index. A similar pattern has occurred for index deletions, with large negative abnormal returns during the 1990s but an average return of only 0
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Decentralized Exchange: The Uniswap Automated Market Maker J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-20
ALFRED LEHAR, CHRISTINE PARLOURUniswap is a system of smart contracts on the Ethereum blockchain and is the largest decentralized exchange with a liquidity balance worth up to 4 billion USD and daily trading volume of up to 7 billion USD. It is a new model of liquidity provision, so-called automated market making. For this new market form, we characterize equilibrium in the liquidity pools. We collect all 95.8 million Uniswap interactions
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Test Assets and Weak Factors J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-18
STEFANO GIGLIO, DACHENG XIU, DAKE ZHANGWe show that two important issues in empirical asset pricing—the presence of weak factors and the selection of test assets—are deeply connected. Since weak factors are those to which test assets have limited exposure, an appropriate selection of test assets can improve the strength of factors. Building on this insight, we introduce supervised principal component analysis (SPCA), a methodology that
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Working More to Pay the Mortgage: Household Debt, Interest Rates, and Family Labor Supply J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-16
Michał ZatorI show that households work and earn more (less) when their floating-rate mortgage payments quasi-exogenously increase (decrease). The response is sizable and asymmetric: on average, households adjust their income by 35% of the change in their mortgage payment, but the response is significantly stronger following an increase in payments. While men in dual-earner, childless households respond the most
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Dynamic Competition in Negotiated Price Markets J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-13
JASON ALLEN, SHAOTENG LIUsing contract-level data for the Canadian mortgage market, this paper provides evidence of an “invest-and-harvest” pricing pattern. We build a dynamic model of price negotiation with search and switching frictions to capture key market features. We estimate the model and use it to investigate the effects of market frictions and the resulting dynamic competition on borrowers' and banks' payoffs. We
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Personal Communication in an Automated World: Evidence from Loan Repayments J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-28
CHRISTINE LAUDENBACH, STEPHAN SIEGELWe examine the effect of personal, two-way communication on the payment behavior of delinquent borrowers. Borrowers who speak with a randomly assigned bank agent are significantly more likely to successfully resolve the delinquency relative to borrowers who do not speak with a bank agent. Call characteristics related to the human touch of the call, such as the likeability of the agent's voice, significantly
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ISSUE INFORMATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-28
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AMERICAN FINANCE ASSOCIATION J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-28
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Private Equity and Financial Stability: Evidence from Failed-Bank Resolution in the Crisis J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-27
EMILY JOHNSTON-ROSS, SONG MA, MANJU PURIThis paper investigates the role of private equity (PE) in failed-bank resolutions after the 2008 financial crisis, using proprietary Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation failed-bank acquisition data. PE investors made substantial investments in underperforming and riskier failed banks, particularly in geographies where local banks were also distressed, filling the gap created by a weak, undercapitalized
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Presidential Address: Macrofinance and Resilience J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-11
MARKUS K. BRUNNERMEIERThis address reviews macrofinance from the perspective of resilience. It argues for a shift in mindset, away from risk management toward resilience management. It proposes a new resilience measure, and contrasts micro- and macro-resilience. It also classifies macrofinance models in first- (log-linearized) and second-generation models, and links the important themes of macrofinance to resilience.
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Scope, Scale, and Concentration: The 21st-Century Firm J. Financ. (IF 7.6) Pub Date : 2024-11-04
GERARD HOBERG, GORDON M. PHILLIPSWe provide evidence using firm 10-Ks that over the past 30 years, U.S. firms have expanded their scope of operations. Increases in scope were achieved largely without increasing traditional operating segments. Scope expansion significantly increases valuation and is realized primarily through acquisitions and investment in R&D, but not through capital expenditures. Traditional concentration ratios