
Michael Imerman
· Assistant Professor of TeachingUniversity of California, Irvine · Finance
Active 2009–2026
About
Professor Michael Imerman is an Assistant Professor of Teaching in the Finance Area at the Paul Merage School of Business, UC Irvine. He is also the Faculty Director for the Master of Finance (MFin) Program. He holds a Ph.D. and a B.S. in Finance from Rutgers University. Prior to his current position, he was an Associate Professor of Finance at the Drucker School of Management at Claremont Graduate University and served as Co-Director of the Financial Engineering program. He has also taught at Lehigh University and Rutgers Business School, and completed an NSF-funded postdoctoral fellowship at Princeton University in the Operations Research and Financial Engineering department, where he researched big data analytics and financial data science. Professor Imerman's areas of expertise include banking, risk management, credit risk models, financial regulation, financial data science, and FinTech innovation. He is recognized as an expert in FinTech innovation and is in the final stages of writing a book titled 'The Economics of FinTech,' to be published by MIT Press. He spent a sabbatical with the FinTech Group at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco from January to May 2022. Additionally, he regularly advises and consults for companies ranging from large financial institutions to startups. He serves on the editorial advisory board of the Journal of Financial Data Science and was previously an associate editor for the Journal of Risk Finance. His research has been published in prominent journals such as the Journal of Business & Economic Statistics, Journal of Banking & Finance, and Stochastic Processes and their Applications. At Merage, he teaches courses on Financial Institutions, Venture Capital and Private Equity, and Applied Machine Learning, among others. Before his academic career, he worked as an analyst supporting high-grade corporate bond and credit derivatives traders on Wall Street.
Research topics
- Business
- Finance
- Industrial organization
- Sociology
- Computer Science
- Economics
- Knowledge management
- Ecology
Selected publications
Interview with Cliff Asness of AQR Capital Management
The Journal of Private Markets Investing · 2026-02-27
article1st authorCorrespondingThe Journal of Private Markets Investing · 2026-03-31
article1st authorCorrespondingThe Journal of Private Markets Investing · 2026-05-23
article1st authorCorrespondingPlatforms, Portals, and Private Markets: A Structural Economics of Name, Image, and Likeness
The Journal of Private Markets Investing · 2026-02-25
articleSenior authorName, Image, and Likeness (NIL) rights are commonly framed as a labor-market reform that compensates college athletes for previously unpaid work. This article advances a different interpretation of NIL, as a platform-mediated private market for intangible athlete assets rather than a wage-setting system. NIL compensation reflects negotiated valuations of identity-based, illiquid assets shaped by exposure, narrative, and institutional context. The NCAA transfer portal functions as the central repricing mechanism, transforming latent valuations into contestable negotiations through episodic information revelation. Drawing on private market economics, platform theory, incomplete contracting, and real options logic, we explain why volatility, frequent renegotiation, and compensation dispersion are structural features rather than transitional failures. By viewing NIL within this context, we identify several policy implications, including the role of portal access rules in regulating the frequency of valuation resets, the importance of platform design and transparency in shaping information flow, and the difficulty of applying labor-market regulation to platform-mediated private markets.
Voluntary disclosures and climate change uncertainty: Evidence from CDS premiums
Journal of Corporate Finance · 2025-06-24 · 6 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingJournal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis · 2025-11-13
articleOpen accessAbstract We analyze how corporate direct investments in fintech startups affect startup performance and that of investing firms. Corporate investment in fintech startups is associated with a greater likelihood of successful exit, more and higher-quality innovation, and a greater inflow of high-quality inventors. A stacked difference-in-differences analysis shows that direct investments enhance the operating performance and equity-market valuation of corporate investors in the financial services sector, but not those in the nonfinancial sector. We establish two channels that drive fintech startups’ performance improvements: strategic alliance formation between investors and startups, and enhanced startup monitoring by corporate investors.
Finance research letters · 2025-05-05
article1st authorCorrespondingThe Journal of Private Markets Investing · 2025-12-31
article1st authorCorrespondingThe Journal of Derivatives · 2024-10-21
articleThe authors introduce a Monte Carlo model to value de-SPAC warrants. These warrants contain path-dependent cumulative Parisian redemption features that are ignored by simpler valuation methods. The authors’ model prices basic de-SPAC warrants accurately, provides an upper bound for more complex warrants, and shows that the cumulative Parisian redemption features often have material impacts on warrant values. The authors offer a detailed description and sample code to implement and extend their procedure.
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01
articleOpen access
Frequent coauthors
- 6 shared
Joseph R. Mason
Louisiana State University
- 6 shared
N.K. Chidambaran
University of Mons
- 5 shared
L. A. Shepp
University of Pennsylvania
- 4 shared
Jianqing Fan
- 4 shared
Ben J. Sopranzetti
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
- 3 shared
Wei Dai
- 3 shared
Hong Lee
- 3 shared
Philip Ernst
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