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Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Proceedings Contact information of
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago: Postal: P.O. Box 834, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60690-0834 Phone: 312/322-5111 Fax: 312/322-5515 Email: Web page: http://www.chicagofed.org/ More information through EDIRC
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For technical questions regarding this series, please contact
(Diane Rosenberger) Series handle: repec:fip:fedhpr
More pages of listings: 0 |1 |2 |3 |4 |5
2003, Issue May
9-14 Private and public sector responses to corporate governance issues by Cyntia A. Glassman
15-19 Corporate governance : a rational course for public policy by Michael H. Moskow
20-25 Board interdependence by Kenneth D. Lewis
26-29 Appreciating the differences : the impact of Sarbanes-Oxley Act on the banking industry by Elizabeth A. Duke
30-41 Economics of corporate governance reform for financial and non-financial firms by Randall S. Kroszner
42-45 Alternative corporate governance structures : the German 2-tier board by Kenneth E. Scott
46-53 The roles of risk management and auditing in the corporate governance of financial institutions by Susan Schmidt Bies
54-60 Should more supervisory information be publicly disclosed? by Thomas M. Hoenig
61-80 Privacy regulation and what is at risk by Fred H. Cate
81-88 Using market data in supervision by Gary H. Stern
89-99 Bank mergers, competition, and liquidity by Elena Carletti & Philipp Hartman & Giancarlo Spagnolo
100-120 Winners or losers? the effects of bank consolidation on corporate borrowers? by Emilia Bonaccorsi di Patti & Giorgio Gobbi
121-136 Does bank competition affect how much firms can borrow? new evidence from the U.S by Rebecca Zarutskie
137-150 Market structure and quality : an application to the banking industry by Astrid A. Dick
151-169 The institutional memory hypothesis and the procyclicality on bank lending behavior by Allen N. Berger
170-183 Loan characteristics and credit risk by Gabriel Jimenez & Jesus Saurina
184-199 Assessing the profitability and riskiness of small business lenders in the banking industry by James E. Kolari
200-215 Does the source of capital affect capital structure? by Michael Faulkender & Mitchell A. Petersen
216-241 Bank ties and bond market access : evidence on investment-cash flow sensitivity in Japan by Patrick M. McGuire
242-260 Reputation transfer : evidence from bank underwriting by Rajesh P. Narayanan & Kasturi P. Rangan & Nanda K. Rangan
261-277 Market discipline, disclosure and moral hazard in banking by Erlend Nier & Ursel Baumann
278-289 Forecasting supervisory ratings using securities market information by John Krainer & Jose A. Lopez
290-303 Getting the most out of mandatory subordinated debt requirement by Rong Fan & Joseph G. Haubrich & Peter Ritchken & James B. Thomson
304-335 CEO incentives and earnings management by Daniel Bergstresser & Thomas Philippon
336-353 How do analysts weight private information and why? by Qi Chen & Wei Jiang
354-374 The pricing effect of certification on bank loans: evidence from the syndicated credit market by Luca Casolaro & Dario Focarelli & Alberto Franco Pozzolo
375-390 Transparency, legal structure, and value relevance of banks: global evidence by Asokan Anandarajan & Bill B. Francis & Iftekhar Hasan & Kose John
391-407 Board connections, conflicts, and bank lending behavior by Randall S. Kroszner & Philip E. Strahan
408-422 Board structure, banking firm performance and the bank holding company organizational form by Renee B. Adams & Hamid Mehran
423-443 Incentive compensation for bank directors: the impact of deregulation by David A. Becher & Terry L. Campbell II & Melissa B. Frye
444-453 Structured finance: uses (and abuses) of special purpose entities by Janet M. Tavakoli
454-470 The role of advertising in commercial banking by Evren Ors
471-492 Credit card securitization, recourse, and regulatory arbitrage by Charles W. Calomiris & Eric J. Higgins
493-508 Structure, performance and conduct in the mutual fund industry: some implications for banks by Gary D. Ferrier & James H. Smalhout
2002, Issue May 1-6 Cyclicality and banking regulation by Alan Greenspan
7-15 Preserving the independence of bank supervision by John D. Hawke, Jr.
16-20 What can bank regulation do better? by Donald E. Powell
21-24 Financial market behavior and appropriate regulation over the business cycle: summary comments by Michael H. Moskow
25-28 Changes in risk through time: measurement and policy responses by Charles A. E. Goodhart [Downloadable!]
29-33 Bank valuations and the business cycle by Sean Ryan
34-38 Taking care with capital rules: why getting them right matters so much by Karen Shaw Petrou [Downloadable!]
39-45 Creating sound supervision practices over the business cycle by Richard Spillenkothen
46-52 Implications of 9/11 for the financial services sector by Roger W. Ferguson, Jr.
53-55 Morgan Stanley's continuity planning by Alexander Frank
56-61 An FDIC approach to resolving a large bank by John F. Bovenzi
62-74 The challenges of regulating large, international financial organizations by Max Harding
75-107 Deposit insurance, moral hazard, and market monitoring by Reint Gropp & Jukka Vesala
108-128 A real options approach to bankruptcy costs: evidence from failed commercial banks during the 1990s by Joseph R. Mason [Downloadable!]
129-149 Moral hazard and optimal subsidiary structure for financial institutions by Charles M. Kahn & Andrew Winton
150-163 Capital requirements, market power, and risk-taking in banking by Rafael Repullo
164-167 Comments on the impact of regulatory practices by Jean-Charles Rochet
168-188 Are banking supervisory data useful for macroeconomic forecasts? by Ron Feldman & Jangryoul Kim & Preston Miller & Jason Schmidt
189-205 Monetary policy and bank supervision by Vasso P. Ioannidou [Downloadable!]
206-225 The choice of regulators in banking by Richard J. Rosen
226-231 The Basel II approach to bank operational risk: regulation on the wrong track by Richard J. Herring
232-248 Addressing criticism to the Basel Capital Accord by Nicholas Le Pan
239-248 Quantification of operational risk by Matthew Brown & John S. Jordan & Eric S. Rosengren
249-260 Did interstate banking deregulation reduce state business cycle fluctuations? by Donald Morgan & Bertrand Rime & Philip E. Strahan
261-281 On the role of firm balance sheets in the transmission mechanism by Adam B. Ashcraft & Murillo Campello
282-307 The credit cycle and the business cycle: new findings using the "lost" series on commercial credit standards by Cara Loan & Donald P. Morgan
308-334 Should banks be diversified? evidence from individual bank portfolios by Viral V. Acharya & Iftekhar Hasan & Anthony Saunders
335-363 Legal risk as a determinant of syndicate structure in the project finance loan market by Benjamin C. Esty & William L. Megginson [Downloadable!]
364-382 Are some bank managers issuing bonds to call attention to their banks, while other managers are hiding by not issuing? by Daniel M. Covitz & Paul Harrison
383-400 Does function follow organizational form? evidence from the lending practices of large and small banks by Allen N. Berger & Nathan H. Miller & Mitchell A. Petersen & Raghuran G. Rajan & Jeremy C. Stein
401-404 Banks in venture capital: a research agenda by Thomas Hellmann & Laura Lindsey & Manju Puri
405-422 Distance and competition by Hans Degryse & Steven Ongena
423-428 Comments on relationship lending by Gregory F. Udell
429-441 Measuring the CRA subsidy in mortgage markets by Glenn B. Canner & Elizabeth Laderman & Andreas Lehnert & Wayne Passmore
Is three a crowd? competition among regulators in banking by Richard J. Rosen [Downloadable!]
The effects of focus and diversification on bank risk and return: evidence from individual bank loan portfolios by Viral V. Acharya & Iftekhar Hasan & Anthony Saunders [Downloadable!]
Market forces at work in the banking industry: evidence from the capital buildup of the 1990s by Mark J. Flannery & Kasturi P. Rangan [Downloadable!]
442-468 Who is unbanked, and why: results from a large, new survey of low- and moderate-income individuals by Todd Vermilyea & James A. Wilcox [Downloadable!]
469-493 Are mergers beneficial to consumers? evidence from the market for bank deposits by Dario Focarelli & Fabio Panetta [Downloadable!]
494-508 Technological progress and the geographic expansion of the banking industry by Allen N. Berger & Robert DeYoung
509-535 Does bank concentration lead to concentration in industrial sectors? by Nicola Cetorelli [Downloadable!]
2001, Issue May 1-8 The financial safety net by Alan Greenspan
9-12 The financial safety net: costs, benefits, and implications for regulation: a review of the conference by Michael H. Moskow
12-18 International financial stability: the Canadian perspective by James S. Peterson
19-22 Government and GSEs: relationship and regulation by Armando Falcon, Jr.
23-31 The financial safety net: five free-market principles for policymaking by Richard Baker
32-38 Community banking, deposit insurance reform, and too big to fail by Kenneth A. Guenther
39-46 Controlling safety net by Laurence H. Meyer
47-53 Recommendations for the changes in the way Federal Deposit Insurance is funded by Arthur J. Murton
52-67 GSEs: why is effective government supervision hard to achieve? by Thomas H. Stanton
68-74 Fannie Mae's benefits to home buyers: the business perspective by Timothy Howard
75-100 GSEs as instruments of federal policy: public benefits and public costs by Bert Ely
101-117 Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae: their funding advantage and benefits to consumers by James E. Pearce & James C. Miller, III
118-132 Federal Deposit Insurance versus federal sponsorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: the structure of subsidy by Richard Scott Carnell
133-149 The simple microeconomics of government-sponsored enterprises by Wayne Passmore & Roger Sparks
150-164 A critique of the CBO's sponsorship benefit analysis by Alden L. Toevs
165-196 Do Federal Home Loan Bank membership and advances lead to bank risk-taking? by Dusan Stojanovic & Mark D. Vaughn & Timothy J. Yeager
197-215 Size, charter value, and risk in banking: an international perspective by Gianni De Nicolo
216-226 Banking industry consolidation and productive efficient by Douglas Evanoff & Evren Ors
227-240 Local bank office ownership, deposit control, market structure, and economic growth by Robert N. Collender
241-261 The ability of banks to lend to informationally opaque small businesses by Allen N. Berger & Leora F. Klapper & Gegory F. Udell
262-276 Firms and their distressed banks: lessons from the Norwegian banking crisis (1988-1991) by Steven Ongena & David C. Smith & Dag Michalsen
277-293 The effects of banking market size structure on bank competition: the case of small business lending by Allen N. Berger & Richard Rosen & Gregory F. Udell
294-314 The diffusion of financial innovations: an examination of the adoption of small business credit scoring by large banking organizations by Jalal Akhavein & W. Scott Frame & Lawrence J. White
315-327 Learning-by-doing, scale efficiencies, and financial performance at Internet-only banks by Robert DeYoung
328-352 Recent trends in bank loan syndications: evidence for 1995-1999 by Jonathan D. Jones & William W. Lang & Peter Nigro
353-365 Bank capital as an incentive mechanism by Alistair Milne
366-384 Testing for market discipline in the European banking industry: evidence from subordinated debt issues by Andrea Sironi
385-422 Managerial incentives and the efficiency of capital structure by Joseph P. Hughes & William W. Lang & Choo-Geol Moon & Michael S. Pagano
423-449 The costs and benefits of moral suasion: evidence from the rescue of long-term capital management by Craig Furfine
450-471 Deposit insurance and moral hazard by Asli Demirgüç-Kunt & Enrica Detragiache
472-488 Risk pricing at financial institution in pre-crisis Thailand: implications for modeling the Thai crisis by Timothy P. Opiela
489-529 A new approach to measuring financial contagion by Kee-Hong Bae & G. Andrew Karolyi & Rene M. Stulz
530-554 Causes of U.S. bank distress during the depression by Charles W. Calomiris & Joseph R. Mason
555-576 Asset market linkages in crisis periods by Philipp Hartmann & Stefan Straetmans & Casper G. de Vries
577-591 Do institutional safeguards limit the danger of contagion in the German interbank market? by Christian Upper & Andreas Worms
592-597 Comments on financial crises and contagion by Barry Eichengreen
598-609 Issues in deposit insurance reform by James A. Wilcox
610-623 Can small banks survive deregulation? the role of the Fed in the correspondent banking market by James J. McAndrews & Philip E. Strahan
624-647 The competitive analysis in the banking industry no longer reflects reality by Douglas V. Austin & Craig D. Bernard
648-666 Allocating bank regulatory powers: lender of last resort, deposit insurance, and supervision by Charles M. Kahn & João A.C. Santos
667-681 Dollarization, bailouts, and the stability of the banking system by Douglas Gale & Xavier Vives
682-698 Expansion of bank powers: who gains the most? by Philip E. Strahan & Amir Sufi
699-705 Developing effective deposit insurance systems by J. P. Sabourin
706-729 How good are EU deposit insurance schemes? by Maximilian J. B. Hall
730-755 Designing financial safety nets for countries in different circumstances by Edward J. Kane
756-776 Estimating fair deposit insurance premiums for a sample of banks under a new long-term insurance pricing methodology by George G. Pennacchi
2001, Issue Apr 2000, Issue Oct 2000, Issue May 1999, Issue Oct More pages of listings: 0 |1 |2 |3 |4 |5 Access
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This page was last updated on 2009-11-16.
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