Submission Period Closed
The submission period for SFS Cavalcade North America 2024 is now closed.
The submission period for SFS Cavalcade North America 2024 is now closed.
Today is the final day to submit to SFS Cavalcade North America 2024! Please make sure to begin your submission with time to complete it before 11:59pm EST. To submit, please visit SFS Cavalcade North America.
“Conflicts of Interest in Municipal Bond Advising and Underwriting” by Daniel G. Garrett “The Labor Market Effects of Loan Guarantee Programs” by Jean-Noel Barrot, Thorsten Martin, Julien Sauvagnat, and Boris Vallee
The deadline to submit to SFS Cavalcade North America 2024 is approaching! To submit, please visit SFS Cavalcade North America. The deadline for submissions is December 11, 2023. Dual Submission: The Cavalcade features optional dual submission with the Review of Asset Pricing Studies and the Review of Corporate Finance Studies. New this year: PhD grants We especially encourage PhD students to submit to the conference. The SFS will provide up to 8 travel grants… Read More »Deadline Approaching: SFS Cavalcade North America
“Size Discount and Size Penalty: Trading Costs in Bond Markets” by Gabor Pinter, Chaojun Wang, and Junyuan Zou “Digital Payments and Consumption: Evidence from the 2016 Demonetization in India” by Sumit Agarwal, Pulak Ghosh, Jing Li, and Tianyue Ruan “The Savings of Corporate Giants” by Olivier Darmouni and Lira Mota
“Which Subjective Expectations Explain Asset Prices?” by Ricardo De la O and Sean Myers
The dual submission decisions for the NBER-RFS Big Data and Securities Markets Conference have been sent. If you submitted your paper as a dual submission and did not receive your decision email, please contact us.
“Why did bank stocks crash during COVID-19?” by Viral Acharya, Robert F. Engle, Maximilian Jager, and Sascha Steffen “Missing Data in Asset Pricing Panels” by Joachim Freyberger, Bjoern Hoeppner, Andreas Neuhierl, and Michael Weber
The December issue of RFS has published! The Editor’s Choice paper is: “More Risk, More Information: How Passive Ownership Can Improve Informational Efficiency” by Adrian Buss and Savitar Sundaresan
“Holding Period Effects in Dividend Strip Returns” by Benjamin Golez and Jens Carsten Jackwerth