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Research Lab

Program for Financial Studies

The PFS encourages the creation, translation, and dissemination of research from cross-disciplinary faculty members by hosting faculty research talks; coordinating access to computing and data resources; providing research support and assistance to affiliated faculty; disseminating research to the broader community through the PFS Newsletter; and overseeing fellowships and grants.

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PFS Research Lab

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Educating the Next Generation of Industry Leaders

The MSFE educates the next generation of industry leaders, ready to apply their quantitative training to solve real-world problems in the finance industry. Together, the research and educational missions of the PFS allow us to foster important interactions with industry partners, involving both the sharing of research & ideas, as well as student recruitment.

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Our Research

Social Networks and Subjective Well-Being: The Effect of Regulatory Fit

Authors
Xi Zou, Paul Ingram, and E. Tory Higgins
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

What type of social network is associated with greater well-being? We argue that the effects of social networks on well-being depend on individuals' self-regulatory orientation — a basic motivational factor. We propose that brokerage networks fit a promotion-focused orientation that is concerned with eagerly pursuing gains, whereas closure networks fit a prevention-focused orientation that is concerned with vigilantly maintaining non-losses.

Read More about Social Networks and Subjective Well-Being: The Effect of Regulatory Fit

Analysis and Valuation of Insurance Companies

Authors
Doron Nissim
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

During 2008 and 2009, the insurance industry experienced unprecedented volatility. The large swings in insurers' market valuations, and the significant role that financial reporting played in the uncertainty surrounding insurance companies during that period, highlight the importance of understanding insurers' financial information and its implications for the risk and value of insurance companies.

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The Squam Lake Report: Fixing the Financial System

Authors
Kenneth R. French, Martin N. Baily, John Y. Campbell, John H. Cochrane, Douglas W. Diamond, Darrell Duffie, and Frederic Mishkin
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Book
Publisher
Princeton University Press

In the fall of 2008, fifteen of the world's leading economists — representing the broadest spectrum of economic opinion — gathered at New Hampshire's Squam Lake. Their goal: the mapping of a long-term plan for financial regulation reform.

Read More about The Squam Lake Report: Fixing the Financial System

Domestic Institutions and the Bypass Effect of Financial Globalization

Authors
Shang-Jin Wei and Jiandong Ju
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy

This paper proposes a simple model to study how domestic institutions affect patterns of international capital flows. Inefficient financial system, and poor corporate governance, may be bypassed by two-way capital flows in which domestic savings leave the country in the form of financial capital outflows but domestic investment takes place via inward FDI. While financial globalization always improves the welfare of a developed country with a good financial system, its effect is ambiguous for a developing country with an inefficient financial sector or poor corporate governance.

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Towards an International Green Fund

Authors
Patrick Bolton, Roger Guesnerie, and Frederic Samama
Date
October 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

This paper argues that an important institutional tool to accelerate the transition of the global economy towards greater reliance on renewable energy is the establishment of an International Green Fund (IGF). Such a fund would provide and coordinate financing of green investments and research and development on renewable energy around the world. With the support of such a fund, long-term investors who are already pursuing green investment projects on an ad-hoc basis would be able to scale up these investments and reap larger returns from learning-by-doing and scale economies.

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A Framework for Financial Accounting Standards: Issues and a Suggested Framework

Authors
James Ohlson and Stephen Penman
Date
September 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Accounting Horizons

This paper addresses the issues that confront the FASB and IASB in developing a new conceptual framework document. First, we suggest characteristics that a conceptual framework ought to exhibit. Most of these suggestions are based on our critique of the existing framework and the FASB-IASB work in progress. Second, we present a model framework that exhibits these characteristics. We emphasize up front that this framework is quite explicit. It goes to the heart of what a framework document should do: it places specific restrictions on what constitutes admissible accounting standards.

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Securitization and Distressed Loan Renegotiation: Evidence from the Subprime Mortgage Crisis

Authors
Tomasz Piskorski, Amit Seru, and Vikrant Vig
Date
September 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

We examine whether securitization impacts renegotiation decisions of loan servicers, focusing on their decision to foreclose a delinquent loan. Conditional on a loan becoming seriously delinquent, we find a significantly lower foreclosure rate associated with bank-held loans when compared to similar securitized loans: across various specifications and origination vintages, the foreclosure rate of delinquent bankheld loans is 3% to 7% lower in absolute terms (13% to 32% in relative terms).

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Does Public Financial News Resolve Asymmetric Information?

Authors
Paul Tetlock
Date
September 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

I use uniquely comprehensive data on financial news events to test four predictions from an asymmetric information model of a firm's stock price. Certain investors trade on information before it becomes public; then, public news levels the playing field for other investors, increasing their willingness to accommodate a persistent liquidity shock. Empirically, I measure public information using firms' stock returns on news days in the Dow Jones archive. I find four patterns in postnews returns and trading volume that are consistent with the asymmetric information model's predictions.

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Optimal Mortgage Design

Authors
Tomasz Piskorski and Alexei Tchistyi
Date
August 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

This article studies optimal mortgage design in a continuous-time setting with volatile and privately observable income, costly foreclosure, and a stochastic market interest rate. We show that the features of the optimal mortgage are consistent with an option adjustable-rate mortgage (option ARM). Under the optimal contract, the borrower is given discretion of how much to repay until his balance reaches a certain limit. The default rates and interest rate payment on the mortgage correlate positively with the market interest rate.

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Databases

The Program for Financial Studies funds and supports the following databases:

  1. S&P Global Corporate Transcripts
  2. Thomson Reuters news article database

Past funded databases

  1. Burning Glass Technologies data set
  2. Economatica in conjunction with Watson Library and the Finance and Economics department
  3. SNL Financial Database in conjunction with Dean's office and Watson Library
  4. Markit CDS database licensed for data integration project, in partnership with Watson Library
  5. Lipper eMAXX corporate bond database

Grants

Norges Bank Investment Management

Dates: January 1, 2018 - June 30, 2022

Coordinated by Program for Financial Studies Academic Board Member and current Senior Vice Dean, Charles Jones, Norges Bank has awarded Columbia Business School a 3-year international study of the effect of technological and regulatory changes, across equity and fixed income markets, in both the US and Europe, on market transparency. Technological and business innovations are changing the ability of market participants to observe information about the trading process, and planned regulatory changes in both the US and Europe will significantly change the information available to traders. The main goal is to identify the effects of these various regulatory changes and innovations on market quality and liquidity, and to provide guidance to policymakers and market participants on how to improve market design.

Transparency: At What Speed and Cost? One-day market structure conference hosted on June 14, 2018 in NYC bringing together academics, regulators and practitioners. A second U.S.-based conference was hosted on October 29, 2021 virtually.

NETSPAR

Dates: 2011 - 2014

The Network for Studies on Pensions, Aging and Retirement (NETSPAR) has awarded a competitive three-year international grant to a group of researchers at Columbia Business School. Coordinated by Program for Financial Studies Academic Board Member Andrew Ang and also involving professors Geert Bekaert, Robert Hodrick, Morten Sorensen, and Steve Zeldes, the research agenda is “Aspects of Long Horizon, Illiquidity, and Non-Linear Tail Risk for Portfolio Strategies.” This research exemplifies the link between theory and practice, advancing academic scholarship with direct and significant policy implications in the areas of asset pricing, asset allocation, risk management, and pension valuation and design.

Newsletters

View all of the Program for Financial Studies Newsletters below.

Past Newsletters

  • Summer 2023
  • Fall 2022
  • Spring 2022
  • Fall 2021
  • Fall 2020
  • Summer 2020
  • Fall 2019
  • Summer 2019
  • Fall 2018

Affiliated Faculty

Faculty members receiving research support from the Program for Financial Studies include the professors listed alphabetically below. Please click on any profile to access information about each individual’s research interests, courses taught, publications, and awards.

Photo of Professor Mark Broadie

Mark Broadie

Carson Family Professor of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Academic Advisory Board Member
Program for Financial Studies
Chair of Decision, Risk, and Operations
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Columbia Business School

Charles Calomiris

Henry Kaufman Professor Emeritus of Financial Institutions in the Faculty of Business and Professor Emeritus of International and Public Affairs
Finance Division
A headshot of Kent Daniel

Kent Daniel

Jean-Marie Eveillard/First Eagle Investment Management Professor of Business
Finance Division
Paul Glassermann

Paul Glasserman

Jack R. Anderson Professor of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Lawrence Glosten

Lawrence Glosten

S. Sloan Colt Professor Emeritus of Banking and International Finance in the Faculty of Business
Finance Division
Trevor Harris

Trevor Harris

Arthur J. Samberg Professor Emeritus of Professional Practice
Accounting Division
Geoffrey Heal, Donald C. Waite III Professor of Social Enterprise

Geoffrey Heal

Donald C. Waite III Professor Emeritus of Social Enterprise in the Faculty of Business
Economics Division
Bernstein Faculty Leader
Bernstein Center for Leadership and Ethics
Harry Mamaysky

Harry Mamaysky

Professor of Professional Practice in the Faculty of Business
Finance Division
Faculty Director
Program for Financial Studies
Columbia Business School

Laurie Simon Hodrick

A. Barton Hepburn Professor Emerita of Economics in the Faculty of Business
Finance Division
Columbia Business School

Robert Hodrick

Nomura Professor Emeritus of International Finance
Finance Division
Suresh Sundaresan

M. Suresh Sundaresan

Robert W. Lear Professor of Finance and Economics
Finance Division
Paul Tetlock

Paul Tetlock

Alexandra Morgan Ciardi Professor of Finance and Economics
Finance Division
Senior Vice Dean for Curriculum and Programs
Dean's Office

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