School of Technology: Recent submissions

Now showing items 261-280 of 369

  • Credit risk transfer and financial sector performance 

    Wagner, Wolf; Marsh, Ian (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2004)
    In this paper we study the impact of credit risk transfer (CRT) on the stability and the efficiency of a financial system in a model with endogenous intermediation and production. Our analysis suggests that with respect ...

  • Aggregate liquidity shortages, idiosyncracic liquidity smoothing and banking regulation 

    Wagner, Wolf (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2005)
    This paper develops a model of banking fragility driven by aggregate liquidity shortages. Inefficiencies arise because liquidity smoothing across banks breaks down when there is such a shortage, causing unnecessary and ...

  • Finance and technical change: a neo-Schumpeterian perspective 

    Perez, Carlota (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2004)

  • Corporate governance and banking regulation 

    Alexander, Kern (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2004-06)
    The globalisation of banking markets has raised important issues regarding corporate governance regulation for banking institutions. This research paper addresses some of the major issues of corporate governance as it ...

  • Towards a reconstruction of macroeconomics using a stock flow consistent (SFC) model 

    Godley, Wynne (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2004-05)
    This paper aims to rehabilitate “stock flow consistent” (SFC) macroeconomics as a radical alternative to the neo-classical approach which has dominated the subject during the last thirty years. Commercial banks are reckoned ...

  • Simple open economy macro with comprehensive accounting: a two country model 

    Godley, Wynne; Lavoie, Marc (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2005-02)
    This paper presents a stock flow model of two economies (together comprising the whole world) which trade goods and financial assets with one another. The accounting framework, though comprehensive in its own terms, is ...

  • Synchronisation of financial crises 

    Dungey, Mardi; Jacobs, Jan P A M; Lestano (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2005-08)
    This paper develops concordance indices for studying the simultaneous occurrence of financial crises. The indices are designed to cope with these typically low incidence events. This leads us to confine attention to ...

  • Credit derivatives, the liquidity of bank assets and banking stability 

    Wagner, Wolf (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2005)
    The emerging markets for credit derivatives have improved the liquidity of bank assets by providing banks with various new possibilities for selling and hedging their risks. This paper examines the consequences for banking ...

  • Credit derivatives and sovereign debt 

    Goderis, Benedikt; Wagner, Wolf (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2005-10)
    We study the introduction of credit protection on sovereign debt. We find that such protection reduces debtor moral hazard by allowing a bonghokder to improve his position in negotiations with the sovereign. Moreover, ...

  • Endogenous Market Turbulence 

    Tambakis, Demosthenes N (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2006-04)
    In this paper I study a nonlinear feedback trading model which can generate stable, unstable, turbulent or chaotic asset returns depending on market conditions. The dynamics are driven by the stochastic price impact of net ...

  • The US treasury market in August 1998: untangling the effects of Hong Kong and Russia with high frequency data 

    Dungey, Mardi; Goodheart, Charles; Tambakis, Demosthenes N (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2005-09)
    The second half of August 1998 was dominated by two events. From 14 to 28 August, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) intervened in the Hong Kong equity markets to prevent a speculative double play against their ...

  • Endogenous contagion – a panel data analysis 

    Baur, Dirk; Fry, Renee (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2006)
    This paper proposes a panel data model to analyze contagion in a multivariate framework. The model distinguishes between vulnerability and contagion, and provides a time series of contagion. The most important feature of ...

  • Can Feedback Traders Rock the Markets? A Logistic Tale of Persistence and Chaos 

    Tambakis, Demosthenes N (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2006-03)
    This paper introduces a nonlinear feedback trading model at high frequency. All price adjustment is endogenous, driven by asset return and volatility in the previous trading period. There is no stochastic uncertainty or ...

  • Lawless Privatization? 

    Medova, Elena; Tischenko, Larissa (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2006)
    This paper provides an historical analysis of the four privatization stages of the Russian economy covering the period 1986-2005 with particular attention to the initial period of private capital formation. We use data ...

  • Venture Capital Fund Performance and the IPO Market 

    McKenzie, Michael; Janeway, William (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2008)
    In this paper, the investment performance of a large database of venture funds is considered over a 28 year period. The results suggest that a portfolio of venture capital partnerships can provide an average return that ...

  • Global Rebalancing: US Protection versus Europe-led reflation 

    Irvin, George; Izurieta, Alex (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2006)

  • New Evidence on Taxes and Portfolio Choices 

    Alan, Sule; Atalay, Kadir; Crossley, Thomas F.; Jeon, Sung-Hee (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2009-05)
    Identifying the effect of differential taxation on portfolio allocation requires exogenous variation in marginal tax rates. Marginal tax rates vary with income, but income surely affects portfolio choice directly. In systems ...

  • Technological roots and structural implications of the double bubble at the turn of the Century 

    Perez, Carlota (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2009-04)
    This paper argues that the two boom and bust episodes of the turn of the Century – the Internet mania and crash of 1990s and the easy liquidity boom and bust of 2000s– are two distinct components of a single structural ...

  • Estimating Intertemporal Allocation Parameters using Synthetic Residual Estimation 

    Alan, Sule; Browning, Martin (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2008-01)
    We present a novel structural estimation procedure for models of intertemporal allocation. This is based on modelling expectation errors directly; we refer to it as Synthetic Residual Estimation (SRE). The flexibility of ...

  • Detecting Contagion with Correlation: Volatility and Timing Matter 

    Dungey, Mardi; Yalama, Abdullah (CFAP, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, 2010-05)
    We examine whether contagion tests are affected by controls for volatility clustering and the collection of synchronized data sets. Without controlling for volatility clustering synchronization does not apparently matter. ...