This file is part of IDEAS , which uses RePEc data
[ Papers |
Articles |
Software |
Books |
Chapters |
Authors |
Institutions |
JEL Classification |
NEP reports |
Search |
New papers by email |
Author registration |
Rankings |
Volunteers |
FAQ |
Blog |
Help! ]
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
Order information: Email:
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
1991
1990, Issue May 9-11 1990 1989 1-7 Banking system risk: charting a new course by Silas Keehn
8-18 Government and banking: some historical perspectives on present problems by Carter H. Golembe
19-26 Altering incentives in an evolving depository system: safe banking for the 1990s by Manuel Johnson
27-32 Firewalls and the structure of the future by Dennis Weatherstone
33-57 Bank risk: a status report by Daryl R. Leehaug
58-63 Comments on corporate debt by Ben S. Bernanke
64-69 The real and imaginary risks of leveraged buyout lending by Joseph A. Manganello
70-100 Pricing deposit insurance when the insurer measures risk with error by Mark J. Flannery
101-116 Deposit insurance, risk, and market power in banking by Michael C. Keeley
117-140 Valuation effects of new capital issues by large bank holding companies by Larry D. Wall
143-153 Consequences of going private buyouts for public debt and preferred stock: 1974-1985 by Laurentius Marais & Katherine Schipper & Abbie Smith
154-176 The Fed's failure to act as lender of last resort during the Great Depression, 1929-1933 by David C. Wheelock
177-197 The lender of last resort: some historical insights by Michael D. Bordo
198-220 Success and failure in pre-depression bank liability insurance by Charles W. Calomiris
221-232 The performance of the Canadian banking system, 1920-1940 by Lawrence Kryzanowski & Gordon S. Roberts
233-252 Public policy and the evolution of banking markets by Gary Gorton
253-257 Taking a new look at some old banking lessons by Arthur J. Rolnick
258-266 Commercial banks and securities markets: lessons of the 1920s and 1930s for the 1980s and 1990s by Eugene N. White
267-279 Going public: the advantages of using an investment banker's premarketing services by Lawrence M. Benveniste & Paul A. Spindt
280-300 Raiders, junk bonds, and risk by Roger Craine & Douglas Steigerwald
301-311 Implication of the Texas experience for financial regulation by Paul M. Horvitz
312-317 Investment banking in Europe after 1992 by Ingo Walter & Roy C. Smith
318-323 The globalization of trading and its implications for financial system risk by Kenneth R. Cone
324-343 The changing regulatory environment: a critique by James Annable
344-384 Moral hazard and the thrift crisis: an analysis of 1988 resolution by James R. Barth & Philip F. Bartholomew & Carol J. Labich
385-400 The future of thrifts in the mortgage market by Andrew S. Carron & R. Dan Brumbaugh
401-423 The risk of existing nonbank activities by Elijah Brewer
424-431 Pooling intensifies joint failure risk: abstract by Sherrill Shaffer
432-456 Assessing the risk of bank failure by Gregory R. Gajewski
457-476 Value creation and excess returns in FSLIC-assisted acquisitions of troubled thrifts by Rebel A. Cole & Robert A. Eisenbeis
477-499 Asset disposition in bank failures: theory and practice by John F. Bovenzi & George E. French & Arthur J. Murton
504-514 Historical perspectives in accounting for financial institutions' performance by Donald G. Simonson & George H. Hempel
515-546 Some red flags concerning market value accounting by Allen N. Berger & Kathleen A. Kuester & James M. O'Brien
547-563 Market-value accounting: benefits, costs and incentives by George J. Benston
Banking system risk--charting a new course : proceedings, the 25th annual Conference on Bank Structure and Competition, May 3-5, 1989 by anonymous
564-569 Remarks for the panel on policy recommendations for controlling risk by John P. LaWare
570-574 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago panel: policy recommendations for controlling risk by Thomas C. Theobald
575-604 The reform of Federal Deposit Insurance by Lawrence J. White
1988 1-9 An overview of financial structuring by Alan Greenspan
10-20 The first law of restructuring by Barry F. Sullivan
21-27 The bank by any other name by Thomas G. Labrecque
28-34 The effects of regulation on systemic risks by Anna J. Schwartz
35-41 Systemic risk and financial restructuring by William Taylor
42-44 Remarks for the panel "Lessons from October 19, 1987" by Martha R. Seger
45-59 Lessons from the crash of '87: systemic issues by Gillian Garcia
60-65 Lessons from October 19th by Robert R. Glauber
66-72 The fact and the fiction of October 19 by Joseph A. Grundfest
73-78 Margins and the future of the markets by Merton H. Miller
79-90 Risk-based capital adequacy standards for a sample of 43 major banks by Ehud I. Ronn & Avinash K. Verma
91-111 Bank capital regulation in the 1980s: effective or ineffective? by Michael C. Keeley
112-127 Capital requirements and optimal bank portfolios: a reexamination by William P. Osterberg & James B. Thomson
128-152 A re-examination of the history of bank failures, contagion, and banking panics by R. Alton Gilbert
153-177 Contagion effects and banks closed in the free banking period by Iftekhar Hasan & Gerald P. Dwyer, Jr.
178-201 Parameter variability, event studies, and the two-index model by Edward J. Kane & Haluk Unal
202-218 The market's evaluation of bank risk: a methodological approach by Gary Gorton & Anthony M. Santomero
219-226 Ownership structure, deregulation, and bank risk taking by Anthony Saunders & Elizabeth Strock & Nickolaos G. Travlos
227-243 Off-balance sheet activities and the underinvestment problem in banking by Christopher James
244-260 An analysis of bank hedging in futures markets by G. D. Koppenhaver
261-287 Risk-based capital and off-balance sheet activities by Robert B. Avery & Allen N. Berger
288-290 Corporate separateness by Roger D. Rutz
291-324 Insulating banks from risks run by nonbank affiliates by Samuel B. Chase
325-343 Insulation of banking from nonbanking: an empirical investigation by George E. French & Eric Hirschhorn
344-359 Implementing a fail-proof banking system by Robert J. Lawrence & Samuel H. Talley
360-371 Bank securities activities: current position and future prospects: current position and future prospects by George G. Kaufman & Larry R. Mote
372-396 Economies of scale and scope in the securities industry: a model using survey data from New York securities firms by Lawrence G. Goldberg & Gerald A. Hanweck & Michael Kennan & Allan Young
397-404 Relatedness in financial services by Eileen M. Friars
405-435 Bank failure: an evaluation of the factors contributing to the failure of national banks by Fred C. Graham & James E. Horner
436-459 The international debt crisis and bank security returns surrounding Citicorp's loan-loss-reserve decision of May 19, 1987 by James J. Musumeci & Joseph F. Sinkey, Jr.
The financial services industry in the year 2000: risk and efficiency: proceedings of a Conference held May 11-13, 1988 by anonymous
460-475 Loan loss reserves and stock market valuations of financial institutions by S. Wayne Passmore
476-514 The profitability and risk effects of allowing bank holding companies to merge with other financial firms: a simulation study by John H. Boyd & Stanley L. Graham
515-532 Bank securities powers: are there diversification gains? by Myron L. Kwast
533-577 Lessons of the past and prospects for the future in lender of last resort theory by Walker F. Todd
578-601 Technology, regulation and the financial services industry in the year 2000 by Bert Ely
602-633 Prudential supervision to manage systemic vulnerability by Jack Guttentag & Richard Herring
634-638 Is securities brokerage the future of banking? by Donald J. Crawford
639-645 The future of banking: are "narrow" banks the answer? by Robert E. Litan
646-648 Will firewalls reduce risk? by S. Waite Rawls
649-653 Financial restructuring--where do we go from here? by Kenneth E. Scott
1987 More pages of listings: 0 |1 |2 |3 |4 |5 Access
and download statistics
Did you know? About five million pdf files are downloaded through RePEc every year.
This page was last updated on 2009-11-16.
This information is provided to you by IDEAS at the Department of Economics , College of Liberal Arts and Sciences , University of Connecticut using RePEc data on a server sponsored by the Society for Economic Dynamics .