CEPR Discussion Paper: Does Political Partisanship Cross Borders? Evidence from International Capital Flows

Author(s): Elisabeth Kempf, Mancy Luo, Larissa Schaefer and Margarita Tsoutsoura Date: September 2021 Abstract: Does partisan perception shape the flow of international capital? We provide evidence from two settings, syndicated corporate loans and equity mutual funds, to show that ideological alignment with foreign governments affects the cross-border capital allocation by U.S. institutional investors. Moreover, we[…]

NBER Working Paper: A Theory of the Global Financial Cycle

Author(s): J. Scott Davis and Eric van Wincoop Date: September 2021 Abstract: We develop a theory to account for changes in prices of risky and safe assets and gross and net capital flows over the global financial cycle (GFC). The multi-country model features global risk-aversion shocks and heterogeneity of investors both within and across countries.[…]

FRS International Finance Discussion Papers: Financial Stability Governance and Central Bank Communications

Author(s): Juan M. Londono, Stijn Claessens and Ricardo Correa Date: September 2021 Abstract: We investigate how central banks’ governance frameworks influence their financial stability communication strategies and assess the effectiveness of these strategies in preventing a worsening of financial cycle conditions. We develop a simple conceptual framework of how central banks communicate about financial stability[…]

2022 RCFS Winter Conference

CfP Deadline Date: November 19, 2021 Conference Event: February 19-20, 2022 Event Location: Florida, USA Organizer(s): Review of Corporate Finance Studies The Society for Financial Studies is hosting the fifth annual Review of Corporate Finance Studies Winter Conference on February 19 and 20, 2022. This will be a high–quality conference with a limited number of[…]

SSRN Working Paper: Global Financial Cycle, Household Credit, and Macroprudential Policies

Author(s):Mircea Epure, Irina Mihai, Camelia Minoiu and José-Luis Peydró Date: September 2021 Abstract: We show that macroprudential policies dampen the impact of global financial conditions on local credit cycles. For identification, we exploit exogenous variation in the U.S. VIX and household and business credit registers in a small open economy, where banks depend on foreign[…]

OECD Working Paper: Extreme capital flow episodes from the Global Financial Crisis to COVID-19

Author(s): Annamaria de Crescenzio and Etienne Lepers Date: July 2021 Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic triggered a sudden funding squeeze manifested in major disruptions in international capital flows, the most dramatic of the wave of extreme capital flow episodes since the global financial crisis (GFC). This paper contributes to efforts to better understand this extreme episode[…]

2021 Autumn Workshop of the Financial Intermediation Network of European Studies (FINEST)

CfP Deadline Date: October 5, 2021 Conference Event: December 9-10, 2021 Event Location: Online Keynote Speaker(s): Matteo Benetton (Berkeley Haas, U.S.) Bob DeYoung (The University of Kansas, U.S.) Jennifer L. Dlugosz (Federal Reserve Board, U.S.) Mariassunta Giannetti (Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden) Vasso Ioannidou (City University of London, United Kindgdom) Anna Kovner (Federal Reserve Bank[…]

2021 Autumn Workshop of the Financial Intermediation Network of European Studies (FINEST)

CfP Deadline Date:October 5, 2021 Conference Event:December 9-10, 2021 Event Location:Online Keynote Speaker(s): Matteo Benetton (Berkeley Haas, U.S.) Bob DeYoung (The University of Kansas, U.S.) Jennifer L. Dlugosz (Federal Reserve Board, U.S.) Mariassunta Giannetti (Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden) Vasso Ioannidou (City University of London, United Kindgdom) Anna Kovner (Federal Reserve Bank of New York,[…]

CEPR Discussion Paper: Systemic Implications of the Bail-In Design

Authors: Doyne Farmer, Charles A Goodhart and Alissa M. Kleinnijenhuis Date: September 2021 Abstract: The 2007-2008 financial crisis forced governments to choose between the unattractive alternatives of either bailing out a systemically important bank (SIB) or allowing it to fail disruptively. Bail-in has been put forward as an alternative that potentially addresses the too-big-to-fail and contagion risk[…]

CEPR Discussion Paper: Capital Controls, Domestic Macroprudential Policy and the Bank Lending Channel of Monetary Policy

Authors: Andrea Fabiani, Martha Lopéz Piñeros, José Luis Peydró and Paul Soto Date: September 2021 Abstract: We study how capital controls and domestic macroprudential policy tame credit supply booms, respectively targeting foreign and domestic bank debt. For identification, we exploit the simultaneous introduction of capital controls on foreign exchange (FX) debt inflows and an increase[…]