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

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employ new data from a secondary market for hedge funds, discover a closed hedge fund premium which is highly correlated over time with the closed-end mutual fund premium.
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Sources of Inaction in Household Finance: Evidence from the Danish Mortgage Market

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors build an empirical model to attribute delays in mortgage refinancing to psychological costs inhibiting refinancing until incentives are sufficiently strong; and behavior, potentially attributable to information-gathering costs, lowering the probability of household refinancing per unit time at any incentive.
ReportDOI

Currency Returns, Institutional Investor Flows, and Exchange Rate Fundamentals

TL;DR: This paper explore the interaction between exchange rates, institutional investor currency flows and exchange-rate fundamentals and find that these flows are highly correlated with contemporaneous and lagged exchange rate changes, and that they carry information for future excess currency returns.
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Predictably Unequal? The Effects of Machine Learning on Credit Markets

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple equilibrium model of credit provision in which to evaluate the impacts of statistical technology on the fairness of outcomes across categories such as race and gender was proposed. But the model was not applied to US mortgages.
ReportDOI

Getting Better or Feeling Better? How Equity Investors Respond to Investment Experience

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a large representative sample of Indian retail equity investors, many of them new to the stock market, and found that both years of investment experience and feedback from investment returns have significant effects on investor behavior, favored stock styles, and performance.