Finance

Men yelling in protest.
An economist shows how financial innovation can help reduce ethnic violence.
fizzy drink
The man who brought Perrier to America on how to keep the fizz in your business.
Guy accessing information
New research by Ilan Guttman explores how information disclosure can affect financial panics.
James Gutierrez
James Gutierrez, MBA '05, discusses how he built Progreso Financiero, where he gets his best ideas, and the best advice he's ever received. 
Cover Photo: "Painting with Numbers"
In a new book, a Stanford GSB alum explores how to successfully present numbers.
Angel statue
New research indicates it is even higher than you might think.
photo of faculty and student
Award-winning economist Susan Athey, noted econometrician Guido Imbens, corporate finance expert Joshua Rauh, and others to join Stanford GSB faculty.
YouTube -
06.21.12
Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit discusses criticism of financial institutions and what he calls "responsible finance."
Charles Lee faculty award photo
Stanford GSB students honor Dirk Jenter, Charles Lee, and Jeremy Bulow for their memorable teaching.
New York Times -
06.01.12
Writing in the New York Times, researchers at Stanford’s Steyer-Taylor Center for Energy Policy and Finance urge Congress to reduce the financing costs of renewable energy by granting tax breaks now available to non-renewables.

Pages

Men yelling in protest.
An economist shows how financial innovation can help reduce ethnic violence.
fizzy drink
The man who brought Perrier to America on how to keep the fizz in your business.
James Gutierrez
James Gutierrez, MBA '05, discusses how he built Progreso Financiero, where he gets his best ideas, and the best advice he's ever received. 
Cover Photo: "Painting with Numbers"
In a new book, a Stanford GSB alum explores how to successfully present numbers.
photo of faculty and student
Award-winning economist Susan Athey, noted econometrician Guido Imbens, corporate finance expert Joshua Rauh, and others to join Stanford GSB faculty.
Charles Lee faculty award photo
Stanford GSB students honor Dirk Jenter, Charles Lee, and Jeremy Bulow for their memorable teaching.
Ed Lazear photo
Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Edward P. Lazear puts today's economic recovery in historical context.
Anat Admati photo
A research paper coauthored by finance faculty member Anat Admati has been recognized by the Financial Times and International Centre for Financial Regulation  (ICFR) in their jointly-sponsored third annual essay contest on financial regulation. 
Darrell Duffie
Europe’s banks also need to shore up their capital, not just borrow liquidity, say three experts on international finance.
A 2005 Stanford MBA says that mobile technology devices are revolutionizing banking and other services in Africa, similar to the way computers revolutionized industrialized countries.

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Guy accessing information
New research by Ilan Guttman explores how information disclosure can affect financial panics.
Angel statue
New research indicates it is even higher than you might think.
Image of stock trader
Why bankers like leverage—and what that could mean for the global financial system.
Anat Admati photo
In a Reuters oped, Professor Anat Admati argues that bank dividend payouts to shareholders expose "the economy to unnecessary risks without valid justification."
Anat Admati photo
A letter by Anat R. Admati and Neil M. Barofsky published by the Financial Times, March 8, 2012
Stefan Nagel photo
After analyzing repurchase agreements by money-market funds and security lenders, these researchers believe that banks off-balance-sheet collateralization of commercial paper is more likely to have prompted the run on short-term debt financing in the recent financial crisis.
Darrell Duffie
Finance professor Darrell Duffie of the Stanford Graduate School of Business proposes alternative capital requirements for banks to eliminate potential unintended consequences of financial reform.
John L. Beshears
When they are wrong about quarterly earnings forecasts, analysts may stubbornly stick to their erroneous views, a tendency that might contribute to market bubbles and busts, according to research coauthored by John Beshears of the Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Kenneth Singleton
The 2008 turmoil in world oil prices was not caused by an imbalance of supply and demand, argues Professor Kenneth Singleton of the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Instead there was an "economically and statistically significant effect of investor flows on futures prices."
Anat Admati photo
Originally published by Thomson Reuters-GRC, June 14, 2011.

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