Search results for "jel:G0"

showing 10 items of 16 documents

Innovative methods on managing of resources in banks, caused by the influences of the current crisis on the working process of these institutions

2012

Current actions in the economic circles were significantly caused by the work of the banks, but they also affect significantly the work of the banks. Therefore, the focus of this paper is on perception the novelties which should be applied in the approach of the work of the bank institutions, with a main goal to show the changes in the methods of the organization’s work (financial). The working methods are comparative analysis and perception of the statistic results. The conclusion shows that the securitization, defending some positions which are considered as classic in the economy, hedging should be continuously and actively managed, and never should surface passiveness and leaving things…

Economics and businessbank crisis securitization managingjel:M13jel:G01jel:G21
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CASE STUDY REGARDING THE FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE BASED ON RATES OF RETURN, FOR COMPANIES LISTED ON BUCHAREST STOCK EXCHANGE, ACTING IN MINING AND QUARR…

2013

Analysing the relationships between elements of an enterprise's financial statements, especially between elements from the balance sheet and those from the profit and loss account, the rates of return adds greater utility to the consumers of financial information, offering the possibility to make comparisons over time and space as well as to make reference to internal and external rates. Considering the companies listed on Bucharest Stock Exchange among the best performing, due to the high requirements imposed by a stock market, in this paper has been analyzed the way the financial crisis affected the financial performance in Mining and Quarrying Domain.

Financial performance Bucharest Stock Exchange Rates of Returnjel:G01jel:G10jel:G00Revista Economica
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Is Big Brother Watching Us? Google, Investor Sentiment and the Stock Market

2013

International audience; This paper proposes a novel measure of French investor sentiment based on the volume of internet search reported by Google Trends. We find that our sentiment indicator correlates well with alternative sentiment measures often used in the literature. Furthermore, we find that investor sentiment influences the behavior of mutual fund investors. The results also reveal evidence about short-run predictability in return. An increase in our sentiment index leads to short-term return reversal. The reversal pattern is more pronounced for smaller firms than larger firms, consistent with the predictions of noise trader's models.

Index (economics)Financial economicsbusiness.industryGoogle TrendsInvestor sentimentBrotherStock returnsjel:G0Google Trends Investor sentiment VAR model Stock returnsjel:G1Noise traderEconomics[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationStock marketThe InternetPredictabilitybusiness[ SHS.GESTION ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration[SHS.GESTION] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationMutual fund
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Monetary Plurality in Economic Theory

2018

The objective of this article is to identify the monetary plurality in economic theory. We will try to throw light on the way in which theories are attracted towards both unicity and plurality, and more specifically by unification and diversification of money. It should also be noted, in this respect, that the economics of money has undergone considerable development since the 1970s. A survey of the diverse theories, whether mainstream or not, static or dynamic, holistic or individualistic, will reveal the surprising amount of attention devoted to the problem of monetary unicity and/or plurality. We base our presentation on two lines of thought: -The first of these lines concerns a situatio…

MONNAIEGeneral equilibrium theoryFinancial assetHISTOIRE ECONOMIQUEmonetary theoryMonetary economicsANALYSE ECONOMIQUEJEL: B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B2 - History of Economic Thought since 1925[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciencesjel:G00502 economics and business050602 political science & public administrationEconomicsMainstreamMarxist philosophy050207 economics[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financemonetary pluralityEndogenous moneyMonetarisméconomiesociologie05 social sciences1. No povertyTHEORIE ECONOMIQUENeoclassical economics[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance0506 political sciencepolitiqueFraming (social sciences)money8. Economic growthmonnaieNew classical macroeconomicsÉcole néo-classique d'économie politique; Économie politique; Économie monétaire; Monnaie;JEL: E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics/E.E4 - Money and Interest RatesECONOMIE MONETAIRE
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MARKET CORRELATION, MARKET RETURNS AND PORTFOLIO IMPLICATION

2012

In this paper we examine the market correlation and market returns from Romanian perspective. Market returns are higher in emerging markets than developed market returns, but form portfolio perspective it`s also important to evaluate how much correlations are changing in emerging markets. Our results are important in allocation of financial instruments in institutional portfolio management.

Markets Correlation Fixed Income Securities Portfolio Managementjel:G01jel:G12jel:G23jel:G11Revista economica
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Household Optimism and Borrowing

2012

A unique Finnish household-level data from 1994 to 2009 allow us to measure how households’ financial expectations are related to the subsequent outcomes. We use the difference between the two to measure forecast errors and household optimism and link the errors to households’ borrowing behaviour. We find that households making greatest optimistic forecast errors carry greater levels of debt and are most likely to suffer from excessive debt loads (overindebtedness). They also are less attentive to forecast errors than their pessimistic counterparts when forming their expectations for a subsequent period.

OptimismFinancial economicsCarry (investment)media_common.quotation_subjectDebtEconomicsDemographic economicsPessimismjel:G02jel:D03jel:D14forecast errors; ex ante optimism; borrowingmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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The Intraday Interest Rate: What's that?

2015

We study the intraday interest rate in a CCP-based GC pooling repo market and its key determinants. Since collateral used in this market is identical to collateral eligible for the daylight overdraft facility of the Eurosystem, any intraday rate in this market cannot be a result of collateral constraints keeping banks from using the overdraft for arbitrage. Nevertheless, we find that in the crisis period a statistically and economically significant intraday spread (up to 60 basis points) prevailed that was only somewhat mitigated by the ECB's unconventional monetary policy measures. Our results show that this spread was mainly determined by the market liquidity of the repo market, suggestin…

Overdraftjel:E50intraday interest ratecentral counterpartyovernight reposcentral bank interventionfinancial crisisCollateralmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyjel:E43Financial systemjel:G01jel:G10jel:G21Liquidity premiumInterest rateMarket liquidityFinancial crisisArbitrageBusinessmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Financial Fragmentation and Economic Growth in Europe

2015

Using industry data from Eurostat and applying the Rajan-Zingales methodology, we investigate the real growth effects of banking sector integration in the European Union. Our sample stretches from 2000 until 2012 and includes the phase of rapid financial integration before the global financial crisis as well as the following phase of financial fragmentation and bank deleveraging. We find evidence that banking sector integration had a more than four times stronger growth effect during the crisis than in normal times. Growth effects are also stronger in times of domestic bank deleveraging. We conclude that concerns of European policy makers about fragmentation in the European banking sector a…

cross-border lending; economic growth; European Union; financial crisis; financial fragmentation; financial integration; foreign banks; Rajan-Zingales methodologyjel:G15F36Financial fragmentation; financial integration; foreign banks; crossborder lending; economic growth; financial crisis; Rajan-Zingales methodologyG15ddc:330G01jel:G01jel:F36SSRN Electronic Journal
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Dealing with risk: Gender, stakes, and probability effects

2015

This paper investigates how subjects deal with financial risk, both "upside" (with a small chance of a high payoff) and "downside" (with a small chance of a low payoff). We find that the same people who avoid risk in the downside setting tend to make more risky choices in the upside one. The experiment is designed to disentangle the probability-weighting and utility-curvature components of risk attitudes, and to differentiate settings in which gender differences arise from those in which they do not. Women are more risk averse for downside risks, but gender differences are diminished for upside risks.

jel:C91jel:G02risk aversion probability weighting rank-dependent utility gender differences experiments
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Perception du risque dépendance et demande d'assurance : une analyse à partir de l'enquête PATER

2013

Dans la littérature économique, de nombreux travaux tentent d'expliquer pourquoi les individus s’assurent aussi peu contre la dépendance. Du côté de l’offre, différents freins possibles au développement du marché de l’assurance dépendance ont d’ores et déjà été pointés du doigt par la littérature. Les estimations récentes montrent néanmoins que les limites imputables à l’offre ne suffisent pas à expliquer le faible développement du marché : même si les assurances étaient moins coûteuses et les couvertures proposées plus larges, la majorité des individus ne souscrirait toujours pas d’assurance. Il est donc nécessaire d’aller trouver des explications du côté de la demande d’assurance dépendan…

jel:D81JEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D1 - Household Behavior and Family Economics/D.D1.D10 - GeneralAssurance-invaliditéjel:D84JEL : I - Health Education and Welfare/I.I3 - Welfare Well-Being and Poverty/I.I3.I38 - Government Policy • Provision and Effects of Welfare Programsjel:G02[ QFIN ] Quantitative Finance [q-fin]JEL: J - Labor and Demographic Economics/J.J1 - Demographic Economics/J.J1.J14 - Economics of the Elderly • Economics of the Handicapped • Non-Labor Market DiscriminationJEL : D - Microeconomics/D.D8 - Information Knowledge and Uncertainty/D.D8.D81 - Criteria for Decision-Making under Risk and Uncertaintyperception du risqueaversion au risqueJEL : D - Microeconomics/D.D8 - Information Knowledge and Uncertainty/D.D8.D84 - Expectations • SpeculationsAssurance dépendance[QFIN]Quantitative Finance [q-fin]préférence pour le présentJEL: I - Health Education and Welfare/I.I3 - Welfare Well-Being and Poverty/I.I3.I38 - Government Policy • Provision and Effects of Welfare ProgramsJEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D8 - Information Knowledge and Uncertainty/D.D8.D81 - Criteria for Decision-Making under Risk and UncertaintyAssurance-invalidité;jel:D10JEL : J - Labor and Demographic Economics/J.J1 - Demographic Economics/J.J1.J14 - Economics of the Elderly • Economics of the Handicapped • Non-Labor Market DiscriminationJEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D8 - Information Knowledge and Uncertainty/D.D8.D84 - Expectations • Speculationsjel:I11[QFIN] Quantitative Finance [q-fin]jel:J14JEL: I - Health Education and Welfare/I.I1 - Health/I.I1.I11 - Analysis of Health Care Marketsjel:I13JEL : I - Health Education and Welfare/I.I1 - Health/I.I1.I11 - Analysis of Health Care Marketsjel:I38Assurance dépendance; perception du risque; préférence pour le présent; aversion au risque;JEL : D - Microeconomics/D.D1 - Household Behavior and Family Economics/D.D1.D10 - General
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