Essays about: "Liquidity risk premium"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 18 essays containing the words Liquidity risk premium.
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1. Do you want to swap? A study of the liquidity risk in the SEK interest rate swap market
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Graduate SchoolAbstract : Interest rate swaps are one of the world’s most essential interest rate derivatives. It is therefore important to understand the pricing of these agreements, and how the market is functioning. READ MORE
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2. Stock Market Volatility in the Context of Covid-19
University essay from Jönköping University/IHH, FöretagsekonomiAbstract : The global economy has been severely impacted during the Covid-19 period. The U.S. stock market has also experienced greater volatility. READ MORE
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3. Follow the Money : Determinants of Cap Rates in the Stockholm Office Market
University essay from KTH/Fastighetsföretagande och finansiella systemAbstract : Purpose – In recent decades the inflation- and interest rates have followed a long-termdeclining trend. Followed by central banks starting to use unconventional monetary policiesto cope with financial crises have led to increased amounts of liquidity in the financialsystems and available and looking for investment alternatives on the capital markets. READ MORE
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4. Illiquidity and Its Threats - A Study of the U.S. Corporate Bond Market
University essay from Lunds universitet/Matematisk statistikAbstract : In recent times of market turmoil, liquidity risk has become a big talking point. As certain Swedish fixed income funds, which were advertised as safe investment options, closed for a few trading days in March of 2020 due to the extremely high stress on the market, questions about how illiquidity a↵ects risk and return were asked. READ MORE
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5. Does Noise Trader Risk Repel Arbitrageurs? Evidence from Chinese A-H Share Premia
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för finansiell ekonomiAbstract : What causes the Chinese A-H share premia puzzle? A-shares enjoy a premium over corresponding H-shares on average by 125%, despite the same rights and dividends. The existing hypotheses such as differential risk, differential demand, liquidity, and asymmetric information cannot successfully account for the great magnitude of inflated A-share prices and are also inconsistent with our sample from 2014-2019. READ MORE