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There is a wide variation in the structure of financial systems in different countries. We compare two idealized polar extremes. In one, which we refer to as the "German model," banks and other intermediaries predominate. In the other, which we refer to as the "U.S. model," financial markets...
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Traditional theories of asset pricing assume there is a complete market participation, in the sense that all investors participate in all markets. In that case, preferences shocks typically have only a small effect on asset prices and are not an important determinant of asset price volatility....
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How should new securities be designed? Traditional theories have little to say on this: the literature on capital structure and general equilibrium theories with incomplete markets take the securities firms issue as exogenous. This paper explicitly incorporates the transaction costs of issuing...
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The returns of assets that are traded on financial markets are more volatile than the returns offered by intermediaries such as banks and insurance companies. This suggests that individual investors are exposed to more risk in countries which rely heavily on financial markets. In the absence of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005656998
The returns of assets that are traded on financial markets are more volatile than the returns offered by intermediaries such as banks and insurance companies. This suggests that individual investors are exposed to more risk in countries which rely heavily on financial markets. In the absence of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005657044
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