We propose a theory of financial intermediaries operating in markets influenced by investor sentiment. In our model, banks make loans, securitize these loans, trade in them, or hold cash. They can also borrow money, using their security holdings as collateral. We embed such banks in a stylized financial market, in which securitized loans may be mispriced, and investigate how banks allocate limited capital among the various activities, as well as how they choose their capital structure. Banks maximize profits, and there are no conflicts of interest between bank shareholders and creditors. The theory explains the cyclical behavior of credit and investment, but also accounts for the fundamental instability of banks operating in financial marke...
This paper develops an infinite-horizon model of financial institutions that borrow short-term and i...
This thesis provides an economic analysis of bank risk-taking, addressing the relation between stabi...
This thesis includes three interconnected essays which, building on the work by Hart and Zingales (2...
We propose a theory of financial intermediaries operating in markets influenced by investor sentimen...
We propose a theory of financial intermediaries operating in markets influenced by investor sentimen...
Are financial intermediaries inherently unstable? If so, why? What does this suggest about governmen...
Modern banking theories provide a host of explanations for the existence of intermediaries, highligh...
We explore a model of the interaction between banks and outside investors in which the ability of ba...
Are financial intermediaries – in particular, banks – inherently unstable or fragile, and if so, why...
We consider a simple overlapping generations economy where the behavior of intermediaries, in a mark...
This paper develops a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) model to study how the instabili...
Motivated by the credit crisis 2007-08, this paper presents a theory of "capital market banks"; bank...
This thesis focuses on the issue of bank funding structure and its implications for financial instabi...
Financial intermediaries are arguably the backbone of every economy, engaged in a multitude of activ...
This paper attempts to provide a step towards understanding the role of financial intermediaries ("b...
This paper develops an infinite-horizon model of financial institutions that borrow short-term and i...
This thesis provides an economic analysis of bank risk-taking, addressing the relation between stabi...
This thesis includes three interconnected essays which, building on the work by Hart and Zingales (2...
We propose a theory of financial intermediaries operating in markets influenced by investor sentimen...
We propose a theory of financial intermediaries operating in markets influenced by investor sentimen...
Are financial intermediaries inherently unstable? If so, why? What does this suggest about governmen...
Modern banking theories provide a host of explanations for the existence of intermediaries, highligh...
We explore a model of the interaction between banks and outside investors in which the ability of ba...
Are financial intermediaries – in particular, banks – inherently unstable or fragile, and if so, why...
We consider a simple overlapping generations economy where the behavior of intermediaries, in a mark...
This paper develops a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) model to study how the instabili...
Motivated by the credit crisis 2007-08, this paper presents a theory of "capital market banks"; bank...
This thesis focuses on the issue of bank funding structure and its implications for financial instabi...
Financial intermediaries are arguably the backbone of every economy, engaged in a multitude of activ...
This paper attempts to provide a step towards understanding the role of financial intermediaries ("b...
This paper develops an infinite-horizon model of financial institutions that borrow short-term and i...
This thesis provides an economic analysis of bank risk-taking, addressing the relation between stabi...
This thesis includes three interconnected essays which, building on the work by Hart and Zingales (2...