
Erik Loualiche
· Associate ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of Minnesota · Real Estate and Urban Land Economics
Active 2011–2026
About
Erik Loualiche is an Associate Professor of Finance at the Carlson School of Management. His research focuses on asset pricing and macroeconomics, particularly the interaction between industrial organization and asset pricing. He also studies the interaction between sources of macroeconomic risk and corporate finance activity. Loualiche has taught applied econometrics, macroeconomics, microeconomics, managerial economics, and investments. He spent the past four years as an assistant professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management. He holds a PhD and MA from Northwestern University and a BSc and MSc from the École Polytechnique in France.
Research topics
- Economics
- Political Science
- Monetary economics
- Business
- Economy
- Public administration
- International economics
- Labour economics
- Economic policy
- Financial economics
- Market economy
- Finance
- Geography
- Macroeconomics
- Public economics
- Engineering
Selected publications
Archival Version
Open MIND · 2026-01-01
otherSenior authorWe study how firms allocate resources across their constituent establishments in response to local economic shocks in the context of the Great Depression. Using establishment-level data from the Census of Manufactures, we find that establishmentsin multi-plant firms are affected by local shocks in the regions in which the other establishments comprising the firm are located. In particular, establishment employment is positively affected by positive shocks to the local supply of credit to other establishments that make up the firm. Our results show the important role of firms in the geographic propagation of local economic shocks
Mendeley Data · 2026-04-15
datasetOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThis code has been tested on MATLAB R2025b and requires the distrib_computing, econometrics, optimization, and statistics toolboxes to be installed. The last part of the code (Part4) requires that R is installed. The R code has been tested on version 4.2.1 (2022-06-23 ucrt). The main script to run the chain of programmes is named LPSW2026_JFE_Replication. To run these mFiles (files ending .m) it is necessary to open them up in the editor and then either hit F5 or mark sections of the code and then run using F9. Tables are created as stand-alone texFiles (files ending .tex) and are stored in the folder ./Tables/. Figures are printed as stand-alone pdfFiles (files ending .pdf) and are stored in the folder ./Figures/. Intermediate results are stored as matFiles (files ending .mat) in the folder ./_matFiles.
Version 1
Open MIND · 2026-01-01
otherSenior authorWe study how firms allocate resources across their constituent establishments in response to local economic shocks in the context of the Great Depression. Using establishment-level data from the Census of Manufactures, we find that establishmentsin multi-plant firms are affected by local shocks in the regions in which the other establishments comprising the firm are located. In particular, establishment employment is positively affected by positive shocks to the local supply of credit to other establishments that make up the firm. Our results show the important role of firms in the geographic propagation of local economic shocks
Monetary policy transmission through the exchange rate factor structure
Journal of Financial Economics · 2026-05-16
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingFirm Networks in the Great Depression
The Journal of Economic History · 2025-09-23 · 1 citations
article1st authorWe study how firms allocate resources across their constituent establishments in response to local economic shocks in the context of the Great Depression. Using establishment-level data from the Census of Manufactures, we find that establishments in multi-plant firms are affected by local shocks in the regions in which the other establishments comprising the firm are located. In particular, establishment employment is positively affected by positive shocks to the local supply of credit to other establishments that make up the firm. Our results show the important role of firms in the geographic propagation of local economic shocks.
Causal Inference for Asset Pricing
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01 · 5 citations
preprintOpen accessSenior authorAmerican Economic Review · 2025-02-28 · 29 citations
articleSenior authorThe conventional wisdom in finance is that competition is fierce among investors: if a group changes its behavior, others adjust their strategies such that nothing happens to prices. We estimate a demand system with flexible strategic responses for institutional investors in the US stock market. When less aggressive traders surround an investor, she adjusts by trading more aggressively. However, this strategic reaction only counteracts two-thirds of the impact of the initial change in behavior. In light of these estimates, the rise in passive investing over the last 20 years has made the demand for individual stocks 11 percent more inelastic. (JEL G11, G14, G23, G41)
Monetary Policy Transmission through the Exchange Rate Factor Structure
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessInternational trade and the risk in bilateral exchange rates
Journal of Financial Economics · 2023-09-25 · 23 citations
articleCorrespondingBubbles and the value of innovation
Journal of Financial Economics · 2022-05-08 · 16 citations
articleSenior author
Frequent coauthors
- 97 shared
Matthew Plosser
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- 70 shared
Jean-Noël Barrot
- 46 shared
Valentin Haddad
Anderson University - South Carolina
- 18 shared
Julien Sauvagnat
Bocconi University
- 5 shared
Paul Ho
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
- 4 shared
Alexandre Reggi Pecora
- 3 shared
Dan Green
- 2 shared
Paul Huebner
Anderson University - South Carolina
Education
PhD, Economics
Northwestern University
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