-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
In:
Entrepreneurship & Regional Development
27 (2015), 5-6, S. 307-333
| Alexander S. Kritikos, Michael Fritsch, Alina Sorgner
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Why do entrepreneurship rates differ so markedly by gender? Using data from a large representative German household panel, we investigate to what extent personality traits, human capital, and the employment history influence the start-up decision and can explain the gender gap in entrepreneurship. Applying a decomposition analysis, we observe that the higher risk aversion among women explains a large ...
In:
CESifo Economic Studies
61 (2015), 1, S. 202-238
| Marco Caliendo, Frank M. Fossen, Alexander S. Kritikos, Miriam Wetter
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Are capital controls and macroprudential measures related to international exposures successful in achieving their objectives? Assessing their effectiveness is complicated by selection bias; countries which change their capital-flow management measures (CFMs) often share specific characteristics and are responding to changes in variables that the CFMs are intended to influence. This paper addresses ...
In:
Journal of International Economics
96 (2015), Suppl. 1, S. S76-S97
| Kristin Forbes, Marcel Fratzscher, Roland Straub
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
The paper analyzes the effects of changes to regulatory policy and to monetary policy on cross-border bank lending since the global financial crisis. Cross-border bank lending has decreased, and the home bias in the credit portfolio of banks has risen sharply, especially among banks in the euro area. Our results suggest that expansionary monetary policy in the source countries – as measured by the ...
In:
Journal of International Money and Finance
52 (2015), 32-59
| Franziska Bremus, Marcel Fratzscher
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
The scapegoat theory of exchange rates (2 and 5) suggests that market participants may attach excessive weight to individual economic fundamentals, which are picked as “scapegoats” to rationalize observed currency fluctuations at times when exchange rates are driven by unobservable shocks. Using novel survey data that directly measure foreign exchange scapegoats for 12 exchange rates, we find empirical ...
In:
Journal of Monetary Economics
70 (2015), 1-21
| Marcel Fratzscher, Dagfinn Rime, Lucio Sarno, Gabriele Zinna
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We re-examine the dynamic relations between stock prices and macroeconomic fundamentals for six major industrialized countries in the wake of the recent financial crisis. Our analysis is based on a structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) model, which relies on a long-run restriction to identify fundamental and non-fundamental shocks to stock prices. This paper is the first in this line of literature ...
In:
Journal of Economics and Business
80 (2015), S. 1-20
| Anton Velinov, Wenjuan Chen
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This study assesses whether the international monetary system is already tri-polar by testing what we call China's ‘dominance hypothesis’, i.e. whether the renminbi already influences exchange rate and monetary policies strongly in Asia, a direct reference to the old ‘German dominance hypothesis’ which ascribed to the German mark a dominant role in Europe in the 1980s. Using a global factor model of ...
In:
The Economic Journal
124 (2014), Iss. 581, S. 1343-1370
| Marcel Fratzscher, Arnaud Mehl
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Central banks regularly communicate about financial stability issues. This article asks how such communications affect financial markets, based on a unique dataset covering more than 1,000 releases of Financial Stability Reports (FSRs) and speeches by 37 central banks over the past 14 years. The findings suggest that optimistic FSRs lead to significant and potentially long-lasting positive abnormal ...
In:
The Economic Journal
124 (2014), 577, S. 701-734
| Benjamin Born, Michael Ehrmann, Marcel Fratzscher
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We analyze the transmission of the 2007 to 2009 financial crisis to 415 country-industry equity portfolios. We use a factor model to predict crisis returns, defining unexplained increases in factor loadings and residual correlations as indicative ofcontagion. While we find evidence of contagion from the United States and the global financial sector, the effects are small. By contrast, there has been ...
In:
The Journal of Finance
69 (2014), No.6, S. 2597-2649
| Geert Bekaert, Michael Ehrmann, Marcel Fratzscher, Arnaud Mehl
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
People typically want to feel good. At times, however, they seek to maintain or enhance negative affect or to dampen positive affect. The prevalence of such contrahedonic motivation has been related to simultaneous experiences of positive and negative (i.e., mixed) affect. We investigated the role that implicit mental representations of affect valence may play in this regard in a study with N = 400 ...
In:
Emotion
14 (2014), 5, S. 950-961
| Michaela Riediger, Gert G. Wagner, Cornelia Wrzus