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The papers in this volume empirically examine three evolving and
important topics in financial economics: the determinants of
monetary and bank efficiency and the key factors that contribute to
successful monetary and banking operations; the institutional
factors that enhance or detract from the efficient manner in which
financial markets work; and the macro, micro, and social factors
that impact stock valuation and optimum portfolio selection.
Hardbound. This volume contains a broad range of papers examining
contemporary managerial and public policy issues in finance and
banking. Special emphasis is given to financial institutions,
instruments, and markets. The volume includes papers examining
prudential regulations and competition among banking institutions
in different countries; the dynamics of stock returns along
domestic and international dimensions; and the analysis of debt and
equity issuance in the framework of the firm's financing decision.
Other papers in the volume provide insight into such timely issues
as the global integration of capital markets and the nature and
impact of financial crisis at the household and economy-wide
levels.
Equal treatment in access to credit has long been a fundamental
social goal in the United States. However, despite the passage of
several laws in the U.S. prohibiting discrimination in the
provision of financial services on the basis of race, gender, and
marital status, among other factors, questions concerning the
existence of racial discrimination in such areas as home mortgage
loans and small business credit continue, and confound public
policy makers. This book is composed of nine articles and a panel
discussion, originally published as a special issue of the Journal
of Financial Services Research. These contributions explore the
complex issue of discrimination in financial services.
The second volume of the series contains a combination of
theoretical and empirical studies of issues in financial economics,
investments, and banking authored by leading researchers in the US
and Europe. Specific topics examined include asset pricing,
corporate governance, dividend policy, pricing of financial
services, portfolio theory, interest rate risk, capital structure,
diversification strategies, and credit risk modelling. In addition
to theoretical and empirical papers included in the volume, two
represent applied articles written from a regulatory perspective by
practising regulators.
This volume includes papers on topics related to efficiency issues
in U.S. and European equity and options markets, as well as the
productive efficiency of various types of depository financial
institutions. In the capital market context, the book highlights
the provisions of efficient trading services in the capital markets
and the role of market size, concentration, quality, governance and
automation of trading. In the banking perspectives, the volume
presents topics related to market integration, dynamic models of
bank production, regulatory closure rules for banking firms, risk
based insurance premiums in banking, and the economics of the
research and development in private firms.
This volume contains contemporary analysis of three key
developments in financial economics: financial integration; the
dynamics of financial markets; and the information, computer, and
technology revolution and its impact on markets and the economic
performance, among others. With regard to financial integration,
the contributions focus on three streams in international finance:
the impact of increased financial integration on credit risk and on
the required regulatory arrangements needed to reduce the
probability of welfare reducing bank failures, the creation of new
international currencies, and the relationship between finance and
growth. With regard to the dynamics of financial markets, specific
attention is devoted to the complex interaction of different sets
of traders with heterogeneous beliefs and information sets.
Finally, with respect to the ICT revolution, attention is focused
on its impact on: foreign direct investment across countries,
competition in the banking industry, consolidation in the financial
services industry including its effects credit availability for
small and medium sized enterprises, and the capital structure
decisions of financial firms.
Equal treatment in access to credit has long been a fundamental
social goal in the United States. However, despite the passage of
several laws in the U.S. prohibiting discrimination in the
provision of financial services on the basis of race, gender, and
marital status, among other factors, questions concerning the
existence of racial discrimination in such areas as home mortgage
loans and small business credit continue, and confound public
policy makers. This book is composed of nine articles and a panel
discussion, originally published as a special issue of the Journal
of Financial Services Research. These contributions explore the
complex issue of discrimination in financial services.
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