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Essays on the economics of risk management and financial institutions

Posted on:2014-08-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of PennsylvaniaCandidate:Kim, HoikwangFull Text:PDF
GTID:1459390005488570Subject:Economics
Abstract/Summary:
his dissertation is comprised of three essays. In the first essay, I examine evidence for contagious runs in money market funds during the 2008 financial crisis, drawing on a rich dataset tracking U.S. money market fund daily flows and enrollment status in the Treasury Department's Temporary Guarantee Program (TGP). My evaluation of the positive externality effect from peer funds' enrollment in the TGP on non-enrolled funds shows that runs were contagious across funds. Moreover, retail investors were less likely than institutional investors to return to prime money market funds after TGP enrollment, implying that the latter benefited more from the government backstop. The results are germane to policies seeking to rebuild investor confidence in times of financial crisis. My second essay (with Santosh Anagol) studies a natural experiment in the Indian mutual funds sector that created a 22-month period during which closed-end funds were allowed to charge an arguably shrouded fee, whereas open-end funds were forced to charge entry loads. Forty-five new closed-end funds were started during this period, collecting USD 7.6 billion, whereas only two closed-end funds were started in the 66 months prior to this period, collecting USD 42 billion. No closed-end funds were started in the 20 months after this period. We estimate that investors lost and fund firms gained approximately USD...
Keywords/Search Tags:Closed-end funds were started, Money market, USD, Financial, Period
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