https://anser.press/index.php/fel/issue/feed Financial Economics Letters 2023-08-09T16:05:01+08:00 Yonghong Jiang fel@anser.press Open Journal Systems <p>Financial Economics Letters (FEL) is a scholarly peer-reviewed journal invited submissions in all areas of financial economics, broadly defined. FEL’s emphasis is on theoretical developments and their implementation, empirical, applied, and policy-oriented research in financial economics.</p> <p>Papers are invited in the following areas: Asset Management; Asset Pricing; Bankruptcy and Liquidation; Behavioural Finance; Bitcoin Investment; Banking; Corporate Finance; Corporate Governance; Commodities; Contagion, Crises and Interdependence; Derivatives; Energy Finance; FinTech; Fund Management; Financial Econometrics; Financial markets and marketplaces; Financial Mathematics and Econophysics; Forecasting; International Finance; Market Efficiency; Mergers, Acquisitions and the Market for Corporate Control; Micro Finance Institutions Microstructure; Networks; Performance Analysis; Political Risk; Portfolio Optimization; Regulation of Financial Markets and Institutions; Risk Management and Analysis; Systemic Risk; Term Structure Models; Venture Capital.</p> <p>Contributions which make use of the methods of mathematics, statistics and operations research will be welcomed. This journal consists of concise communications, which are a vehicle to quickly communicate important pieces of new results. FEL aims to provide a rapid response to papers, with all papers undergoing a desk review by one of the Editors in Chief before being sent for review.</p> https://anser.press/index.php/fel/article/view/155 Time-frequency dependency between stock market volatility, and Islamic gold-backed and conventional cryptocurrencies 2023-03-25T11:20:06+08:00 Md. Mamunur Rashid mamunur1621027@gmail.com Md. Ruhul Amin ruhul1112003@yahoo.com <p>We extend the Shariah-compliant digital assets and Islamic Fintech literature through exploring the time-frequency associations between the volatility index (VIX) and cryptocurrencies (both Islamic and traditional). Employing wavelet-based technique, we find that Islamic cryptocurrencies demonstrate low or no coherency with stock market volatility compared to traditional cryptocurrencies (except Tether) during the whole time and frequency bands, highlighting the hedging capabilities of Islamic cryptocurrencies. Tether also serves the same against VIX, as there is a low or favorable link between these variables. Finally, our findings would be prolific to digital currency traders and investors in designing the portfolio strategies.</p> 2023-04-03T00:00:00+08:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Md. Mamunur Rashid, Md. Ruhul Amin https://anser.press/index.php/fel/article/view/263 Transforming personal finance thanks to artificial intelligence: myth or reality? 2023-03-29T11:00:45+08:00 Edouard Augustin Ribes edouard.augustin.ribes@gmail.com <p>Current societal challenges related to retirement planning, healthcare systems’ evolution and environmental changes require households to pay a closer attention to their personal finances. This in turns calls for the associated industry to transform and scale. To do so, the personal finance industry could potentially leverage artificial intelligence tools for which there has been increasing levels of chatter. However, there is, to my knowledge, little consensus on whether or not those tools are appropriate given the challenges ahead. The literature review at the heart of this article first suggests that the stream of personal finance where transformation is more than needed is the one pertaining to investments, rather than the ones associated to loans, insurances or payments. Second, the productivity levers fueling the transformation of this branch are yet more driven, as of today, by simple digitalization notions rather by the usage of A.I. instruments. Over the next couple of years, more attention should thus be paid to use/business cases associated to investment products and the digitalization of their distribution chain.</p> 2023-04-04T00:00:00+08:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Edouard Augustin Ribes https://anser.press/index.php/fel/article/view/312 The FED’s Strategy on a Targets-based Monetary Policy Framework 2023-04-01T16:20:59+08:00 Florian Gerth floriangerth@uowdubai.ac.ae Yiyang Bian YiyangBian@uowdubai.ac.ae <p>Major economic and financial contractions usually go hand-in-hand with muted inflation. This has been true for the Great Depression, the Global Financial Crisis, as well as the Covid-19 crisis. In this paper, we theoretically highlight and discuss the evolution of instruments and approaches monetary-policy decision makers at the Federal Reserve have in lifting inflation to desired levels in times of the zero-lower bound, paying particular focus on more rigorous developments like asymmetric average inflation and temporary price-level targeting.</p> 2023-06-21T00:00:00+08:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Florian Gerth, Yiyang Bian https://anser.press/index.php/fel/article/view/442 Money holdings and budget deficit in a growing economy with consumers living forever 2023-06-01T18:47:01+08:00 Yasuhito Tanaka ochibocho@gmail.com <p>I examine the problem of budget deficit in a growing economy in which consumers hold money as a part of their savings in the case where consumers live forever. For simplicity and tractability I use a discrete time dynamic model and Lagrange multiplier method. In the appendix I briefly explain the solution using a discrete time version of the Hamiltonian method. I will show the following results. 1) Budget deficit is necessary for full employment under constant prices. 2) Inflation is induced if the actual budget deficit is greater than the value at which full employment is achieved under constant prices. 3) If the actual budget deficit is smaller than the value which is necessary and sufficient for full employment under constant prices, a recession occurs. Therefore, balanced budget cannot achieve full employment under constant prices. I do not assume that budget deficit must later be made up by budget surplus.</p> 2023-09-14T00:00:00+08:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Yasuhito Tanaka https://anser.press/index.php/fel/article/view/597 Government deficit and “The World’s smallest macroeconomic model” by Paul Krugman 2023-08-09T16:05:01+08:00 Yasuhito Tanaka ochibocho@gmail.com <p>In his "The World’s smallest macroeconomic model” (Krugman (1999)), Paul Krugman argued that under the assumption of price rigidity, a shortage of money supply leads to underemployment or recession, so increasing money supply can eliminate underemployment and restore full employment. But, how do we increase the money supply? I will show that we need a government deficit to increase the money supply in order to restore full employment from recession. Also, I will show that in a growing economy, if people hold money, a government deficit is necessary to maintain full employment under constant price or inflation. A government deficit is not only effective in pulling the economy out of recession, it is even necessary for continued growth without inviting either recession or inflation. The government deficit in this paper represents the difference between government expenditures and government revenues. When the difference is positive, we say that the government has a deficit. This paper seeks to explore theoretically and normatively the role of government deficits in achieving and maintaining full employment in a growing economy without causing inflation, using a very simple model by Krugman.</p> <p> </p> 2023-09-14T00:00:00+08:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Yasuhito Tanaka