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Matteo Maggiori

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  51
Citations -  2598

Matteo Maggiori is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Currency & Reserve currency. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 44 publications receiving 1836 citations. Previous affiliations of Matteo Maggiori include National Bureau of Economic Research & New York University.

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International Liquidity and Exchange Rate Dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a theory of exchange rate determination based on capital flows in imperfect financial markets, which not only helps rationalize the empirical disconnect between exchange rates and traditional macroeconomic fundamentals, but also has real consequences for output and risk sharing.
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Financial Intermediation, International Risk Sharing, and Reserve Currencies

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors model the equilibrium risk sharing between countries with varying financial development and provide evidence that financial net worth plays a crucial role in understanding this asymmetric risk sharing, where the more financially developed country consumes more and runs a trade deficit financed by the higher financial income that it earns as compensation for taking greater risk.
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Conditional Risk Premia in Currency Markets and Other Asset Classes

TL;DR: The DR-CAPM as mentioned in this paper can jointly explain the cross-section of equity, commodity, sovereign bond and currency returns, thus offering a unified risk view of these asset classes.
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Conditional Risk Premia in Currency Markets and Other Asset Classes

TL;DR: The DR-CAPM model as mentioned in this paper can jointly rationalize the cross section of equity, equity index options, commodity, sovereign bond and currency returns, thus offering a unified risk view of these asset classes.
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Very Long-Run Discount Rates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors exploit a unique feature of housing markets in the U.K. and Singapore, where residential property ownership takes the form of either leaseholds or freeholds.