Nemanja Radic
Cranfield University
24 Papers
36 Citations
Nemanja Radic is an academic researcher from Cranfield University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Investment banking & Financial crisis. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 21 publications. Previous affiliations of Nemanja Radic include London Metropolitan University & Sapienza University of Rome.
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Papers
Efficiency and Risk-Taking in Pre-Crisis Investment Banks
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed cost and profit efficiency for a sample of investment banks for the G7 countries (Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK and US) and Switzerland prior to the recent financial crisis.
Bank competition and stability in the CIS markets
TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of bank competition on financial stability in the transition markets of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in the context of the competing competition-stability/competition-fragility hypotheses found in the literature is investigated.
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Shareholder value creation in Japanese banking
TL;DR: In this paper, a new measure of the economic value added approach, based on the shadow price of equity, is developed in order to account for specific characteristics of the Japanese banking system and is then used in a dynamic panel data model as a linear function of various bank-risk, bank-specific, and macroeconomic variables.
Monetary policy and the banking sector in Turkey
TL;DR: This paper found that monetary policy influenced Turkish bank lending between 1991 and 2007 through the money and bank lending channels, while capital and GDP growth have positive and significant long-run effects on bank loan growth, inflation, bank size and efficiency are not significant determinants.
Price Competition, Efficiency and Riskiness in Investment Banking
TL;DR: This paper examined the intertemporal relationships between price competition, cost efficiency and riskiness for a sample of investment banks in large developed countries over 2000-2008 and found that price competition is rather limited in investment banking worldwide thus implying the existence of colluding oligopolies.