Cheol S. Eun (Ph.D., NYU) is Professor Emeritus of Finance and the Thomas R. Williams Chair (Ret.) at the Scheller College of Business, Georgia Institute of Technology. Before joining Georgia Tech, he taught at the University of Minnesota and the University of Maryland. He also taught at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Singapore Management University, and the Esslingen University of Technology (Germany) as a visiting professor. He has published extensively on international finance issues in such major journals as the Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economics, JFQA, Journal of Banking and Finance, Journal of International Money and Finance, Management Science, and Oxford Economic Papers. Also, he has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Banking and Finance, Journal of Financial Research, Journal of International Business Studies, and European Financial Management. His research is widely quoted and referenced in various scholarly articles and textbooks in the United States as well as abroad. Dr. Eun is the founding chair of the Fortis/Georgia Tech Conference on International Finance. The key objectives of the conference were to promote research on international finance and provide a forum for interactions among academics, practitioners, and regulators who are interested in vital current issues of international finance. Dr. Eun has taught a variety of courses at the undergraduate, graduate, and executive levels, and was the winner of the Krowe Teaching Excellence Award at the University of Maryland. He also has served as a consultant to many national and international organizations, including the World Bank, Apex Capital, and the Korean Development Institute, advising on issues relating to capital market liberalization, global capital raising, international investment, and exchange risk management. In addition, he has been a frequent speaker at academic and professional meetings held throughout the world.
International financial management canadian perspectives 2nd edition pdf
Bruce G. Resnick is Professor Emeritus of Finance at the Wake Forest University School of Business in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Prior to retiring, he was the Joseph M. Bryan Jr. Professor of Banking and Finance. He received a D.B.A. in finance from Indiana University, an M.B.A. from the University of Colorado and a B.B.A.from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. Prior to joining Wake Forest, he taught at Indiana University for ten years, the University of Minnesota for five years, and California State University, Chico for two years. He has served as a visiting professor at Bond University in Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, and at the Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration in Finland. Additionally, he served as the Indiana University resident director at the Center for European Studies at Maastricht University, the Netherlands. He also served as an external examiner to the Business Administration Department of Singapore Polytechnic and as the faculty advisor on Wake Forest University study trips to Japan, China, and Hong Kong.Dr. Resnick taught M.B.A. and undergraduate courses in the areas of investments, portfolio management, and international financial management. His research interests include market efficiency studies and empirical tests of asset pricing models. A major interest has been the optimal design of internationally diversified portfolios constructed to control for parameter uncertainty and exchange rate risk. Most recently, he has focused on studying the information content contained in Eurocurrency interest rates and yield spread comparisons of domestic and international bonds. His research articles have been published in most of the major academic journals in finance. Other researchers and textbook authors have widely cited his research. He served for many years as an associate editor for the Journal of Multinational Financial Management, the Journal of Economics and Business, and the Journal of Financial Research.
In many parts of the world, international financial institutions (IFIs) play a major role in the social and economic development programs of nations with developing or transitional economies. This role includes advising on development projects, funding them and assisting in their implementation.
Modern economies rely on cross-border transactions and the free flow of international capital. More than a third of all financial transactions occur across borders, and that number is expected to grow.
IFRS Accounting Standards address this challenge by providing a high-quality, internationally recognised set of accounting standards that bring transparency, accountability and efficiency to financial markets around the world.
IFRS Accounting Standards bring transparency by enhancing the international comparability and quality of financial information, enabling investors and other market participants to make informed economic decisions.
Successful financial-services providers take three steps to position their business for this shift. First, they attract customers by solving very specific yet relevant needs. Examples include Alipay and Klarna, which make shopping and cash management easier and convenient for small businesses through quick and simple onboarding, transparent pricing, new POS terminal features, and buy-now-pay-later checkout solutions.
In the years following the financial crisis, there has been increased scrutiny of financial institutions as economic and social actors. The crisis highlighted the dual issues of access to financial services and the structural and behavioural regulation of banks and countries have introduced various prudential, governance and access-based reforms. This article addresses eight specific issues spanning three main areas of reform. The three areas of reform are: the availability and provision of financial services; behavioural reforms designed to discourage excessive risk-taking and promote sound corporate governance practices in financial institutions; and prudential reforms designed to reduce risk in financial institutions. The eight specific issues are: (1) access to retail banking services in Canada; (2) access to short-term credit and payday lending; (3) the Equator Principles for project finance; (4) whistle-blower protection and self- regulation by audit committees; (5) corporate governance strategies for effective risk management; (6) executive compensation and say-on-pay; (7) the regulation of proprietary trading by insured depository institutions; and (8) central clearing of over-the-counter derivatives. Topics 1-3 relate to the first of the three broad areas of reform identified above; topics 4-6 relate to the second area of reform; and topics 7-8 relate to the third. 2ff7e9595c
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