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GND: 1125565128


Click on a term to reduce result list Information symbol The result list below will be reduced to the selected search terms. The terms are generated from the titles, abstracts and STW thesaurus of publications by the respective author.

gutachten beitragsleistungenbeitragsleistungen schweizerischenschweizerischen bundesbahnenbundesbahnen pensionspensions hülfskassehülfskasse reservenreserven aktiengesellschaftaktiengesellschaft gutachtenhülfskasse
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Years of publications: 1400 - 2022

24 records from EconBiz based on author GND ID Information logo


1. Is it a boy or a girl? : newborn gender and household portfolio decisions

Arnaboldi, Francesca; Beccalli, Elena; Gioia, Francesca;
2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link

2. Value premium and macroeconomic variables

Beccalli, Elena; Doninelli, Nicola; Orsini, Cesare;
2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 1 (based on OpenCitations)

3. The future of financial mutuals

Beccalli, Elena;
2024
Type: Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge ; Einzelbeiträge; Sammelwerk ;

4. Le prospettive del credito per una ripresa sostenibile

Cesarini, Francesco; Beccalli, Elena;
2023
Type: Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge ; Einzelbeiträge; Sammelwerk ;

5. Network vs integrated organizational structure of cooperative banks : evidence on the Italian reform

Beccalli, Elena; Rossi, Ludovico; Viola, Andrea;
2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link

6. Il sistema finanziario europeo : cosa regolare, come regolare, chi deve regolare

Cesarini, Francesco; Beccalli, Elena;
2021
Type: Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge ; Einzelbeiträge; Sammelwerk ;

7. Are European Banks Too Big? Evidence on Economies of Scale

abstract

This paper investigates the level of economies of scale, as well as their determinants, for 103 European listed banks over the period 2000-2011 by employing a Stochastic Frontier Approach. The results reveal that economies of scale are widespread and move together for all size classes, although small and medium-sized banks experience the lowest economies of scale and even diseconomies of scale in some of the years under analysis. At country level, the smallest financial systems (Iceland, Belgium and Finland) and the countries most affected by the financial crisis (Ireland, Iceland, Belgium, Portugal and Spain) experience the lowest economies of scale (if not even diseconomies of scale) probably due to the small/reduced use of their production capacity. With regard to the effects on economies of scale of risk-taking, diversification in the business model and profitability, higher economies of scale are documented for banks more oriented towards investment banking (in all periods), banks with a higher liquidity but only up to a liquidity ratio of about 5.3 percent (convex curve during the crisis only), banks with less Tier 1 (concave, although almost flat, curve during the crisis only), and banks contributing less to systemic risk (during the crisis only). The main policy implication concerns the too big to fail regulation, and especially the fact that the break-up hypothesis seems not to find support from our evidence

Anolli, Mario; Beccalli, Elena; Borello, Giuliana;
2013
Availability: Link Link

8. Hidden effects of bank recapitalizations

Beccalli, Elena; Frantz, Pascal; Lenoci, Francesca;
2018
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
Citations: 9 (based on OpenCitations)

9. Economies of scope in the EU banking industry

Rossi, Ludovico; Beccalli, Elena;
2018
Type: Aufsatz im Buch; Book section;
Availability: Link
Citations: 1 (based on OpenCitations)

10. Bank Earnings Forecasts, Risk and the Crisis

abstract

This paper explores the ability of financial analysts to gauge the risk taken by banks and investigates the impact of the recent financial crisis. Using a sample of 36,343 analyst forecasts issued for 411 European banks over 2003-2009 we find that analyst forecasts are influenced by risk, the type of forecaster (optimistic or pessimistic) and vary over time. Optimistic analyst forecasts are significantly influenced by insolvency, market and credit risk over the acute-crisis period (July 2007 to March 2009) resulting in larger forecast errors. Of our risk indicators only credit risk (5-year CDS spreads) significantly influences analyst forecasts pre- and during the crisis period - higher levels of credit risk are reflected in less accurate forecasts. Leverage is negatively linked to forecast error as is market volatility which has a differential impact on forecasts over time. As analyst forecasts respond to different types of risk in a varying manner this questions the role of analysts in the market discipline process

Anolli, Mario; Beccalli, Elena; Molyneux, Philip;
2012
Availability: Link Link

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Publishing years

1
  1939
2
  1920

Series

  1. Verhandlungen des Schweizerischen Juristenvereins, Heft (1)