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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

Dear Boss: in case you wondered what you should do

Authors
Ellen Carr
Date
March 25, 2020
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times

For one, if you’re worried about a Covid-19 cash crunch, consider slicing your salary.

Read More about Dear Boss: in case you wondered what you should do

Measuring the Cost of Regulation: A Text-Based Approach

Authors
Charles Calomiris, Harry Mamaysky, and Ruoke Yang
Date
March 8, 2020
Format
Working Paper

We derive a measure of firm-level regulatory exposure from the text of corporate earnings calls. We use this measure to study the effect of regulation on companies’ growth, leverage, profitability, and equity returns. Higher regulatory exposure results in slower sales and asset growth, lower leverage, reduced profitability, but higher post-call equity returns. These effects are mitigated for larger firms. Our findings suggest that both compliance risk and physical operational cost are consequences of increased regulation, but the magnitude of the effects of compliance risk are larger.

Read More about Measuring the Cost of Regulation: A Text-Based Approach

The Economics of Firms' Public Disclosure: Theory and Evidence

Authors
Matthias Breuer, Katharina Hombach, and Maximillian Mueller
Date
February 1, 2020
Format
Working Paper

Using a price-theoretic framework, we derive and empirically test a fundamental demand force shaping firms’ public disclosure decisions. Our framework suggests that the number of firms’ transacting stakeholders, not just their shareholders, is a major determinant of disclosure demand and, hence, firms’ decision to disclose publicly.

Read More about The Economics of Firms' Public Disclosure: Theory and Evidence

Moving the Conceptual Framework Forward: Accounting for Uncertainty

Authors
Richard Barker and Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Contemporary Accounting Research

To meet the objectives of financial reporting in the IASB's Conceptual Framework, the "balance-sheet approach" embraced by the Framework is necessary but not sufficient. Critical, but largely overlooked, is the role of uncertainty, which we argue defines the role of accrual accounting as a distinctive source of information for investors when investment outcomes are uncertain. This role is in some sense paradoxical: on the one hand, uncertainty undermines both the balance sheet (because uncertain assets are unrecognized) and the income statement (because mismatching is unavoidable).

Read More about Moving the Conceptual Framework Forward: Accounting for Uncertainty

The Macro-Economics of Crypto-Currencies: Balancing Entrepreneurialism and Monetary Policy

Authors
Eli Noam
Date
December 12, 2019
Format
Journal Article

Cryptocurrencies provide an important dimension of innovation to the evolution of the exchange medium we call money. There are now over 2,000 such currencies, and their potential and volume is growing. How- ever, they will, collectively and in volume, create real problems for the monetary system of a country. Central banks, which are institutions tasked with providing monetary stability, are more essential than ever.

Read More about The Macro-Economics of Crypto-Currencies: Balancing Entrepreneurialism and Monetary Policy

Prospective Gain-Loss Utility: Ordered versus Separated Comparison

Authors
Michaela Pagel
Date
December 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization

Koszegi and Rabin (2006, 2007) develop a model of expectations-based reference-dependent preferences, in which the agent experiences prospect-theory inspired "gain-loss utility" by comparing his actual consumption to all his previously expected consumption outcomes. Koszegi and Rabin (2009) generalize the static model to a dynamic setting by assuming that the agent experiences both contemporaneous gain-loss utility over present consumption and prospective gain-loss utility over changes in expectations about future consumption.

Read More about Prospective Gain-Loss Utility: Ordered versus Separated Comparison

Economic Consequences of the AOCI Filter Removal for Advanced Approaches Banks

Authors
Sehwa Kim, Seil Kim, and Stephen Ryan
Date
November 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Accounting Review

We examine economic consequences of US bank regulators' phased removal of the prudential filter for accumulated other comprehensive income for advanced approaches banks beginning on January 1, 2014. The primary effect of the AOCI filter is to exclude unrealized gains and losses on available-for-sale securities from banks' regulatory capital.

Read More about Economic Consequences of the AOCI Filter Removal for Advanced Approaches Banks

Combining Life and Health Insurance

Authors
Ralph Koijen and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
Date
October 30, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Quarterly Journal of Economics

We estimate the benefit of life-extending medical treatments to life insurance companies. Our main insight is that life insurance companies have a direct benefit from such treatments as they lower the insurer's liabilities by pushing the death benefit further into the future and raise future premium income. We apply this insight to immunotherapy, treatments associated with durable gains in survival rates for a growing number of cancer patients. We estimate that the life insurance sector's aggregate benefit from FDA approved immunotherapies is $9.8 billion a year.

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Declining CO₂ price paths

Authors
Kent Daniel, Robert B. Litterman, and Gernot Wagner
Date
October 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Pricing greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions involves making tradeoffs between consumption today and unknown damages in the (distant) future. While decision making under risk and uncertainty is the forte of financial economics, important insights from pricing financial assets do not typically inform standard climate–economy models. Here, we introduce EZ-Climate, a simple recursive dynamic asset pricing model that allows for a calibration of the carbon dioxide (CO2) price path based on probabilistic assumptions around climate damages.

Read More about Declining CO₂ price paths

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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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