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Tavy Ronen

Tavy Ronen

Rutgers University · Finance and Economics

Active 1997–2024

h-index11
Citations1.1k
Papers5915 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Economics
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Political Science
  • Computer Science
  • Data Mining
  • Financial economics
  • Psychology
  • Data science
  • Philosophy
  • Mathematics
  • Accounting
  • Linguistics
  • Financial system
  • Monetary economics
  • Business
  • Finance

Selected publications

  • The informational role of imagery in financial decision making: A new approach

    Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance · 2023 · 15 citations

    • Computer Science
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Computer Science
  • Unfair “Fair Value” in Illiquid Markets: Information Spillover Effects in Times of Crisis

    Management Science · 2020 · 13 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Monetary economics
    • Economics
    • Business

    We investigate the effects of write-downs on market prices and volumes under fair value accounting. We also examine the prominent role that illiquidity plays in exacerbating the direct and spillover effects of exit valuation on equity and credit default swap (CDS) markets. Using hand-collected data on write-down announcements made during and after the 2007–2009 financial crisis, we find that firms that wrote down assets in accordance with fair value rules experience significant abnormal negative stock returns and spikes in the CDS premiums written on their obligations; similar firms without write-downs exhibit sympathetic and significant negative abnormal returns and positive premiums. We find that both the direct effect of the write-downs and the indirect spillover effects resulting from crisis-related illiquidity in the markets for financial assets (affecting the magnitude of write-downs) and in the securities markets (affecting the reaction to the write-downs) during the financial crisis go beyond normal direct and information transfer effects and may have contributed to the adverse consequences of the crisis. This paper was accepted by Shiva Rajgopal, accounting.

Frequent coauthors

  • Joshua Ronen

    New York University

    21 shared
  • Fayez A. Elayan

    Brock University

    13 shared
  • Mi Zhou

    10 shared
  • Varda Yaari

    Tel Aviv University

    9 shared
  • Seunghan Nam

    8 shared
  • Mark Fedenia

    University of Wisconsin–Madison

    7 shared
  • Xing Zhou

    7 shared
  • Susan E. Gans

    West Chester University

    7 shared
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