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From Early Warning Systems to Asset Managers’ Behavior: Evidence for Mature and Emerging Markets

by Daniela Beckmann (Author)
©2008 Thesis 182 Pages

Summary

Asset managers have often been considered as key drivers behind financial globalization. As they have been both praised as leaders of global financial integration and blamed as originators of financial crises, any understanding of the international financial markets – and financial crises among them – should be based on a thorough understanding of its core actors, i.e. asset managers. The contribution of this work is thus twofold: In its first part, it addresses evidence from early warning systems and the role of fundamentals in financial crises. With the help of macro-level data for 20 countries and based on a new framework to assess the variety of contributions in this young field of research, different models of early warning systems are reviewed, replicated and critically tested for practical application. The work’s second part turns the attention to financial markets from a behavioral perspective. Individual asset managers’ views, perception and behavior are analyzed in detail with the help of a unique micro-level data set, generated in an international survey project with 1,165 participating financial market professionals from six countries. In particular, the role of professional asset managers’ behavioral biases, risk taking, cultural background, and gender differences are analyzed by both selected country studies and cross-country evidence from mature and emerging markets.

Details

Pages
182
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631569559
Language
English
Keywords
Kreditmarkt Prognoseverfahren Frühwarnsystem Investmentfonds Anlageverhalten Financial Crises Asset Managers Behavioral Finance Overconfidence Institutioneller Anleger Gender
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. 181 pp.

Biographical notes

Daniela Beckmann (Author)

The Author: Daniela Beckmann studied economics and management in Hannover and Grenoble. During her time as research and teaching assistant at the Chair for Money and International Finance at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover, the author combined academic insights with practical application: Gained experience ranges from Ph.D. studies at the University of Copenhagen to private bank consultancy and work experience at the World Bank in Washington D.C. The author’s research interests lie in international financial markets, in particular emerging markets, institutional investors, and development economics. Daniela Beckmann received her Ph.D. from the Faculty of Economics and Management at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover in 2007.

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Title: From Early Warning Systems to Asset Managers’ Behavior: Evidence for Mature and Emerging Markets