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Tarun Ramadorai

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  126
Citations -  7595

Tarun Ramadorai is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hedge fund & Market liquidity. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 121 publications receiving 6470 citations. Previous affiliations of Tarun Ramadorai include University of Oxford & Economic Policy Institute.

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Gravity, counterparties, and foreign investment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a new explanation for the persistence of gravity in international investment flows based on new facts about large cross-border commercial real estate transactions and show that if clusters of high-affinity counterparties lie along historical routes, as in the data, preferential matching can perpetuate gravity relationships.
Posted Content

The Secondary Market for Hedge Funds and the Closed-Hedge Fund Premium

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of a closed-hedge fund premium, analogous to the closed-end mutual fund premium which has been extensively studied in the literature, was investigated.
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Privacy, adoption, and truthful reporting: A simple theory of contact tracing applications

TL;DR: The consequences of various policy options, such as security, communication and anonymization policies, are discussed in terms of the size and representativeness of the sample of infection data that contract tracing applications generate.
ReportDOI

How Do Regulators Influence Mortgage Risk: Evidence from an Emerging Market

TL;DR: In this article, the authors employ loan-level data on over a million loans disbursed in India between 1995 and 2010 to understand how fast-changing regulation impacted mortgage lending and risk.
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How Do Foreign Investors Impact Domestic Economic Activity? Evidence from China and India

TL;DR: The authors explored the extent to which cross-border flows affect real economic activity and found that both country and firm-level investment growth rates are significantly affected by these exogenous capital shocks, and that their effect is more pronounced for firms whose marginal investment decisions are more equity-reliant.