Thema Finanzmärkte

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2199 Ergebnisse, ab 1261
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1505 / 2015

    Linkages between the US and European Stock Markets: A Fractional Cointegration Approach

    This paper analyses the long-memory properties of US and European stock indices, as well as their linkages, using fractional integration and fractional cointegration techniques. These methods are more general and have higher power than the standard ones usually employed in the literature. The empirical evidence based on them suggests the presence of unit roots in both the S&P 500 Index and the Euro ...

    2015| Guglielmo Maria Caporale, Luis A. Gil-Alana, C. James Orlando
  • DIW Wochenbericht 40 / 2015

    Bankkredite wichtig für Unternehmensinvestitionen

    Welche Bedeutung haben Bankkredite für Unternehmensinvestitionen? Eine gemeinsame Studie des DIW Berlin, der Universität Hohenheim und der Freien Universität Berlin zeigt, dass ein Rückgang des Kreditangebots der Hausbanken zu einer geringeren Fremdkapitalaufnahme von Unternehmen führt. Dies wiederum reduziert deren Investitionstätigkeit und Arbeitsnachfrage. Banken, die über ausreichend Eigenmittel ...

    2015| Nadja Dwenger, Frank M. Fossen, Martin Simmler
  • DIW Roundup 75 / 2015

    Monetary Policy and the Risk-Taking Channel

    Before the 2007 crisis, the trade-off between output and inflation played a leading role in the discussion of monetary policy. Instead, issues relating to financial stability played a less pronounced role in shaping the stance of monetary policy andwere limited to asset price dynamics. This Round-Up argues that the great interest that emerged after the 2007 crisis in the effects of monetary policy ...

    2015| Michele Piffer
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1496 / 2015

    The Real-Time Predictive Content of Asset Price Bubbles for Macro Forecasts

    This paper contributes to the debate of whether central banks can "lean against the wind" of emerging stock or house price bubbles. Against this background, the paper evaluates if new advances in real-time bubble detection, as brought forward by Phillips et al. (2011), can timely detect bubble emergences and collapses. Building on simulations, the paper shows that the detection capabilities of all ...

    2015| Benjamin Beckers
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Capital-Flow Management Measures: What Are They Good for?

    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
  • Zeitungs- und Blogbeiträge

    Große Gefahr für Europa

    In: Handelsblatt (29.06.2015), S. 48 | Marcel Fratzscher
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 30/31 / 2015

    School, Parents, and Financial Literacy Shape Future Financial Behavior

    Why do some people make better financial decisions than others do? The level of financial literacy plays an important role: Quality schooling that also deals with financial issues likewise leads to better financial decisions. However, many studies neglect how parenting also influences financial behavior. This report shows that parents also have an indirect effect on the financial literacy of their ...

    2015| Antonia Grohmann, Lukas Menkhoff
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 30/31 / 2015

    Many People Have Inadequate Understanding of Basic Financial Concepts: Seven Questions to Antonia Grohmann

    2015
  • Externe Monographien

    Financial Literacy and Peer Effects: Causes and Consequences ; Dissertation

    Hannover: Leibniz Univ., 2015, 187 S. | Antonia Grohmann
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Liquidity Requirements: A Double-Edged Sword

    This paper shows that bank liquidity regulation may be a "double-edged sword." Under certain conditions, it may hamper, rather than strengthen, a bank’s resilience to financial stress. The reason is the existence of two opposing effects of liquidity regulation, a liquidity effect and a solvency effect. The liquidity effect arises because a bank mitigates its risk of illiquidity when it increases its ...

    In: International Journal of Central Banking 11 (2015), 4, S. 129-168 | Philipp König
2199 Ergebnisse, ab 1261
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