Skip to main content
Official Logo of Columbia Business School
Academics
  • Visit Academics
  • Degree Programs
  • Admissions
  • Tuition & Financial Aid
  • Campus Life
  • Career Management
Faculty & Research
  • Visit Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Directory
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • Teaching Excellence
Executive Education
  • Visit Executive Education
  • For Organizations
  • For Individuals
  • Program Finder
  • Online Programs
  • Certificates
About Us
  • Visit About Us
  • CBS Directory
  • Events Calendar
  • Leadership
  • Our History
  • The CBS Experience
  • Newsroom
Alumni
  • Visit Alumni
  • Update Your Information
  • Lifetime Network
  • Alumni Benefits
  • Alumni Career Management
  • Women's Circle
  • Alumni Clubs
Insights
  • Visit Insights
  • Digital Future
  • Climate
  • Business & Society
  • Entrepreneurship
  • 21st Century Finance
  • Magazine
CBS Landing Image
PFS Research Lab
  • Research
  • Affiliated Faculty
  • Resources
  • More 

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.

Jump to main content

PFS Research Lab

  • PFS Research Lab
    • Research
    • Affiliated Faculty
    • Resources
PFS Research Lab Photo Image

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.

View the Research

Our Research

When You Talk, I Remain Silent: Spillover Effects of Peers' Mandatory Disclosures on Firms' Voluntary Disclosures

Authors
Matthias Breuer, Katharina Hombach, and Maximillian Mueller
Date
June 1, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We predict and find that regulated firms' mandatory disclosures crowd out unregulated firms' voluntary disclosures. Consistent with information spillovers from regulated to unregulated firms, we document that unregulated firms reduce their own disclosures in the presence of regulated firms' disclosures. We further find that unregulated firms reduce their disclosures more the greater the strength of the regulatory information spillovers.

Read More about When You Talk, I Remain Silent: Spillover Effects of Peers' Mandatory Disclosures on Firms' Voluntary Disclosures

Do Mutual Funds Keep Their Promises?

Authors
Simona Abis and Anton Lines
Date
May 24, 2021
Format
Working Paper

Mutual fund prospectuses contain a wealth of qualitative information about fund strategies, yet a systematic analysis of this content is missing from the literature. We use machine learning to group together funds with similar strategy descriptions, and ask whether they act in accordance with the text. Despite weak legal recourse for investors, we find that mutual funds largely do keep their promises. We document a market-based disciplinary mechanism: when funds diverge from their group's core strategy, investors withdraw capital.

Read More about Do Mutual Funds Keep Their Promises?

Intermediation in the Interbank Lending Market

Authors
Ben Craig and Yiming Ma
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Journal Article

This paper studies systemic risk in the interbank market. We first establish that in the German interbank lending market, a few large banks intermediate funding flows between many smaller periphery banks. We then develop a network model in which banks trade off the costs and benefits of link formation to explain these patterns. The model is structurally estimated using banks' preferences as revealed by the observed network structure before the 2008 financial crisis.

Read More about Intermediation in the Interbank Lending Market

A Macroeconomic Model with Financially Constrained Producers and Intermediaries

Authors
Vadim Elenev, Tim Landvoigt, and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
Date
May 13, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Econometrica

How much capital should financial intermediaries hold? We propose a general equilibrium model with a financial sector that makes risky long-term loans to firms, funded by deposits from savers. Government guarantees create a role for bank capital regulation. The model captures the sharp and persistent drop in macro-economic aggregates and credit provision as well as the sharp change in credit spreads observed during the Great Recession.

Read More about A Macroeconomic Model with Financially Constrained Producers and Intermediaries

The Importance of Investor Heterogeneity: An Examination of the Corporate Bond Market

Authors
Jane (Jian) Li and Haiyue Yu
Date
May 10, 2021
Format
Working Paper

Corporate bond market participants are increasingly worried about liquidity. However, bid-ask spreads and other standard measures indicate liquidity has not deteriorated significantly. This paper proposes a potential reconciliation. We show the sensitivity of credit yields to bid-ask spreads increased fourfold from 2005 to 2019. We then provide a model that connects this change to the rapid growth of mutual funds in the corporate bond market. The model features heterogeneous investors with different trading needs who choose between a risk-free asset and illiquid bonds.

Read More about The Importance of Investor Heterogeneity: An Examination of the Corporate Bond Market

Learning about competitors: Evidence from SME lending

Authors
Olivier Darmouni and Andrew Sutherland
Date
May 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article

We study how small and medium enterprise (SME) lenders react to information about their competitors’ contracting decisions. To isolate this learning from lenders’ common reactions to unobserved shocks to fundamentals, we exploit the staggered entry of lenders into an information-sharing platform. Upon entering, lenders adjust their contract terms toward what others offer. This reaction is mediated by the distribution of market shares: lenders with higher shares or that operate in concentrated markets react less.

Read More about Learning about competitors: Evidence from SME lending

Redrawing the Map of Global Capital Flows: The Role of Cross-Border Financing and Tax Havens

Authors
Antonop Coppola, Matteo Maggiori, Brent Neiman, and Jesse Schreger
Date
May 1, 2021
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Quarterly Journal of Economics

Global firms finance themselves through foreign subsidiaries, often shell companies in tax havens, which obscures their true economic location in official statistics. We associate the universe of traded securities issued by firms in tax havens with their issuer’s ultimate parent and restate bilateral investment positions to better reflect the financial linkages connecting countries around the world. Bilateral portfolio investment from developed countries to firms in large emerging markets is dramatically larger than previously thought.

Read More about Redrawing the Map of Global Capital Flows: The Role of Cross-Border Financing and Tax Havens

CIP Deviations, the Dollar, and Frictions in International Capital Markets

Authors
Wenxin Du and Jesse Schreger
Date
May 1, 2021
Format
Working Paper

The covered interest rate parity (CIP) condition is a fundamental arbitrage relationship in international finance. In this chapter, we review its breakdown during the Global Financial Crisis and its continued failure in the subsequent decade. We review how to measure CIP deviations, discuss the drivers of CIP deviations, and the implications of CIP deviations for global financial markets.

Read More about CIP Deviations, the Dollar, and Frictions in International Capital Markets

Dynamic Information Regimes in Financial Markets

Authors
Paul Glasserman, Harry Mamaysky, and Yiwen Shen
Date
April 28, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We develop a model of investor information choices and asset prices where the availability of information about fundamentals is time-varying. A competitive research sector produces more information when more investors are willing to pay for that research. This feedback, from investor willingness to pay for information to more information production, generates two regimes in equilibrium, one having high prices and low volatility, the other the opposite. The low-price, high-volatility regime is associated with greater information asymmetry between informed and uninformed investors.

Read More about Dynamic Information Regimes in Financial Markets

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Current page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 69

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

External CSS

Official Logo of Columbia Business School

Columbia University in the City of New York
665 West 130th Street, New York, NY 10027
Tel. 212-854-1100

Maps and Directions
    • Centers & Programs
    • Current Students
    • Corporate
    • Directory
    • Support Us
    • Recruiters & Partners
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Newsroom
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility
    • Privacy & Policy Statements
Back to Top Upward arrow
TOP

© Columbia University

  • X
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Back to top

Accessibility Tools

English French German Italian Spanish Japanese Russian Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Arabic Bengali