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Financial Institutions

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Financial Institutions Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Financial Institution Articles

Economics and Policy
Finance
Financial Institutions
Financial Policy
Financial Technology
Date
April 23, 2025
Woman working on finances
Economics and Policy
Finance
Financial Institutions
Financial Policy
Financial Technology

How Tax-Deferred Retirement Accounts Cost the U.S. Government $23 Billion a Year

Columbia Business School research reveals the hidden cost of traditional retirement accounts: a $3.8 trillion government-owned investment portfolio driving $23.4 billion in annual fees. A shift to Roth accounts could save billions — and fund a national retirement match.

  • Read more about How Tax-Deferred Retirement Accounts Cost the U.S. Government $23 Billion a Year about How Tax-Deferred Retirement Accounts Cost the U.S. Government $23 Billion a Year
Business and Society
Management
Social Enterprise
Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change
Date
March 11, 2025
More MPE: Justine Zinkin
Business and Society
Management
Social Enterprise
Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change
Social Enterprise News

Turning Purpose Into Progress: Justine Zinkin ’02 on Leading Change in Social Enterprise

In this episode of More MPE, hosts Ray Horton and Sandi Wright speak with Justine Zinkin ’02, CEO of Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners, a national social enterprise providing financial services to low-income workers.
 

  • Read more about Turning Purpose Into Progress: Justine Zinkin ’02 on Leading Change in Social Enterprise about Turning Purpose Into Progress: Justine Zinkin ’02 on Leading Change in Social Enterprise
Finance
Research
Date
February 17, 2025
Silhouettes of two business people
Finance
Research
Private Equity Program News

Closing the Gender Gap: Why Private Equity Needs More Women in Leadership

Despite equal representation in MBA programs, women remain underrepresented in US private equity. A report by Professor Michael Ewens finds that achieving gender parity requires firms to attract, retain, and promote more women and offers strategies to support this goal.

  • Read more about Closing the Gender Gap: Why Private Equity Needs More Women in Leadership about Closing the Gender Gap: Why Private Equity Needs More Women in Leadership
Finance
Financial Institutions
Future of Work
Labor
Leadership
Social Impact
Date
February 07, 2025
Silhouettes of two business people
Finance
Financial Institutions
Future of Work
Labor
Leadership
Social Impact

Closing the Gender Gap: Why Private Equity Needs More Women in Leadership

Despite equal representation in MBA programs, women remain underrepresented in US private equity. A report by Professor Michael Ewens finds that achieving gender parity requires firms to attract, retain, and promote more women and offers strategies to support this goal.

  • Read more about Closing the Gender Gap: Why Private Equity Needs More Women in Leadership about Closing the Gender Gap: Why Private Equity Needs More Women in Leadership
Capital Markets and Investments
Economics and Policy
Finance
Finance and Economics
Date
January 07, 2025
Wall Street sign and US flags
Capital Markets and Investments
Economics and Policy
Finance
Finance and Economics

Are Liquidity Regulations Making Banks Safer—or Riskier?

Research by Professors Kairong Xiao and Suresh Sundaresan paint a picture of how post-crisis reforms are affecting the banking sector, often in unanticipated ways.

  • Read more about Are Liquidity Regulations Making Banks Safer—or Riskier? about Are Liquidity Regulations Making Banks Safer—or Riskier?
Finance
Milstein - Banks & Financial Stability
Date
August 20, 2024
First Republic Bank branch sign
Finance
Milstein - Banks & Financial Stability
Finance News

How Economic Pressures Could Trigger a New Wave of Bank Failures

Recent CBS research reveals how rising interest rates and commercial real estate distress threaten the US banking sector, especially for regional banks.

  • Read more about How Economic Pressures Could Trigger a New Wave of Bank Failures about How Economic Pressures Could Trigger a New Wave of Bank Failures
Finance
Milstein - Banks & Financial Stability
Date
July 25, 2024
The entrance to the FDIC headquarters.
Finance
Milstein - Banks & Financial Stability

The New Banking Landscape: How Securities Have Overtaken Traditional Lending

New research from CBS Professor Tomasz Piskorski finds that bank balance sheet lending has largely been replaced by alternative funding structures, creating new opportunities — and mandates — for regulators.

  • Read more about The New Banking Landscape: How Securities Have Overtaken Traditional Lending about The New Banking Landscape: How Securities Have Overtaken Traditional Lending
Climate and Sustainability
Climate and Technology
Date
May 16, 2024
Shutterstock Photo Image
Climate and Sustainability
Climate and Technology

Don’t Slam the Door on Inexpensive Chinese Electric Vehicles

EVs shouldn’t be a luxury item, but Biden’s tariffs mean they may remain so.

  • Read more about Don’t Slam the Door on Inexpensive Chinese Electric Vehicles about Don’t Slam the Door on Inexpensive Chinese Electric Vehicles

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Related Faculty

Professor Tano Santos

Tano Santos

Robert Heilbrunn Professor of Asset Management and Finance
Finance Division
Director
Heilbrunn Center for Graham and Dodd Investing
Luigi Rizzo

Luigi Rizzo

Adjunct Professor of Business
Finance Division
Ellen Carr

Ellen Carr

Adjunct Associate Professor of Business
Finance Division
Adjunct Associate Professor
Heilbrunn Center for Graham and Dodd Investing
Frederic Mishkin

Frederic Mishkin

Alfred Lerner Professor of Banking and Financial Institutions
Economics Division
Columbia Business School

Maria Brisbane

Adjunct Assistant Professor
Finance Division
Robert Willens

Robert Willens

Adjunct Professor of Business
Finance Division
Tomasz Piskorski

Tomasz Piskorski

Edward S. Gordon Professor of Real Estate
Finance Division
Paul Glassermann

Paul Glasserman

Jack R. Anderson Professor of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Olivier Darmouni

Olivier Darmouni

Associate Professor of Business
Finance Division
Jane (Jian) Li

Jane (Jian) Li

Assistant Professor of Business
Finance Division
Kairong Xiao, Associate Professor of Business

Kairong Xiao

Roger F. Murray Associate Professor of Business
Finance Division
David E. Weinstein

David Weinstein

Professor (by courtesy)
Finance Division
Director
Center on Japanese Economy and Business

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Latest Financial Institution Research

Should the Government Be Paying Investment Fees on $3 Trillion of Tax-Deferred Retirement Assets?

Authors
Mattia Landoni and Stephen Zeldes
Date
April 1, 2025
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

Under standard assumptions, individuals and the government are indifferent between traditional tax-deferred retirement accounts and “front-loaded” (Roth) accounts. Adding investment fees to this benchmark, individuals are still indifferent but the government is not. We show that under weak conditions firms charge equal percent fees under both systems, yielding higher dollar fees under Traditional. We estimate that tax deferral increases demand for asset management services by $3.8 trillion, costing the government $23.4 billion in annual fees.

Read More about Should the Government Be Paying Investment Fees on $3 Trillion of Tax-Deferred Retirement Assets?

Monetary Policy and Rents

Authors
Boaz Abramson , Pablo De Llanos, and Lu Han
Date
March 19, 2025
Format
Working Paper

This paper studies the effects of monetary policy on housing rents. We provide comprehensive measures of rent inflation at a micro-geographic scale by constructing a new repeat-rent index. Using our rent index, we estimate the impulse responses of rents to monetary policy shocks by employing local projection methods. We find that monetary tightening increases both real and nominal rents. A 25 basis point increase in the 30-year fixed rate mortgage raises real (nominal) rents by 1.7 (1.4) percent 12-24 months following the monetary policy shock.

Read More about Monetary Policy and Rents

Banks’ Motivations for Designating Securities as Held to Maturity

Authors
Sehwa Kim , Seil Kim, and Stephen G. Ryan
Date
February 17, 2025
Format
Working Paper

We provide evidence that banks classify fixed-rate debt investment securities as held to maturity (HTM) rather than as available for sale (AFS) when HTM classification provides preferred financial accounting and regulatory capital treatments, not because they have a distinct economically motivated intent and ability to hold the securities to maturity.

Read More about Banks’ Motivations for Designating Securities as Held to Maturity

Minimum Viable Signal: Venture Funding, Social Movements, and Race

Authors
Emmanuel Yimfor , Matt Marx, and Qian Wang
Date
November 29, 2024
Format
Journal Article

How do venture capital investors react to social movements, especially those that relate to historical underrepresentation in their funding decisions? We use image and name algorithms combined with clerical review to classify race for 150,000 founders and 30,000 investors. Our new data allow us to assess the impact of George Floyd's murder on VC funding of Black entrepreneurs and identify which VCs were most responsive. Although VCs responded swiftly, investment in Black-owned startups reverted to prior levels within two years.

Read More about Minimum Viable Signal: Venture Funding, Social Movements, and Race

Interest Rate Sensitivities, Firm Growth Rates, and Stock Returns

Authors
Sehwa Kim , Doron Nissim , and Min Jun Song
Date
November 1, 2024
Format
Working Paper

We examine the relationship between stock return sensitivities to interest rate changes (interest rate sensitivities) and firm growth. A discounted cash flow method implies a negative association between interest rate sensitivities and growth expectations because, all else equal, the present value of distant cash flows declines more sharply than that of near-term cash flows when interest rates rise.

Read More about Interest Rate Sensitivities, Firm Growth Rates, and Stock Returns

Book Value Risk Management of Banks: Limited Hedging, HTM Accounting, and Rising Interest Rates

Authors
Joao Granja, Erica Xuewei Jiang, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski , and Amit Seru
Date
March 1, 2024
Format
Working Paper

In the face of rising interest rates in 2022, banks mitigated interest rate exposure of the accounting value of their assets but left the vast majority of their long-duration assets exposed to interest rate risk. Data from call reports and SEC filings shows that only 6% of U.S. banking assets used derivatives to hedge their interest rate risk, and even heavy users of derivatives left most assets unhedged.

Read More about Book Value Risk Management of Banks: Limited Hedging, HTM Accounting, and Rising Interest Rates

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