Search Results

SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:liquidity management 

Working Paper
Demand Shock, Liquidity Management, and Firm Growth during the Financial Crisis

We examine the transmission of liquidity across the supply chain during the 2007-09 financial crisis, a period of financial market illiquidity, for a sample of unrated public firms with differential demand shocks. We measure differential demand by comparing firms that primarily supply to government customers with those that primarily supply to corporate customers. A difference-in-difference analysis shows little evidence that relatively high demand firms provide more or less liquidity to their own suppliers. The main determinant of the usage of short-term financing is a product market shock. ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2015-96

Working Paper
The International Transmission of Shocks: Foreign Bank Branches in Hong Kong during Crises

The international transmission of shocks in the global financial system has always been an important issue for policy makers. Different types of foreign shocks have different effects and policy implications. In this paper, we examine the effects of the recent U.S. financial crisis and the European sovereign debt crisis on foreign bank branches in Hong Kong. Unlike the literature on global banking that studies a global bank?s foreign operations from a home country perspective, our analysis uses foreign bank branches in Hong Kong and has a distinct host country perspective, which would seem ...
Working Paper Series , Paper 2014-25

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

Hui, Cho-hoi 1 items

Kwan, Simon H. 1 items

Maksimovic, Vojislav 1 items

Tham, Mandy 1 items

Wong, Eric T. C. 1 items

Yook, Youngsuk 1 items

show more (1)

FILTER BY Jel Classification

F65 1 items

G01 1 items

G21 1 items

FILTER BY Keywords

liquidity management 2 items

Financial crisis 2 items

demand shocks 1 items

foreign banks 1 items

inventory 1 items

shocks transmission 1 items

show more (3)

PREVIOUS / NEXT