Matthew Ringgenberg
Assistant Professor of Finance
Research Interests:
Empirical Asset Pricing, Equity Lending, Economics of Information, Short Selling, Volatility
Selected Publications:- "How are Shorts Informed? Short sellers, news, and information processing", Journal of Financial Economics, with J. Engelberg, A. Reed, 2012
- "A Multiple Lender Approach to Understanding Supply and Search in the Equity Lending Market", Journal of Finance, with A. Kolasinki, A. Reed, 2013
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Awards/Honors:- M. Wayne DeLozier Award, University of North Carolina, Kenan-Flagler Business School, 2011
- Research Grant from The Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance, 2011
- PhD Teaching Award, University of North Carolina, Kenan-Flagler Business School, 2010
- Pegg Lee-Smith Wahal Award, University of North Carolina, Kenan-Flagler Business School, 2009
- Research Grant from The Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance, 2007
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Professor Ringgenberg joined the Olin Business School in 2011. His research focuses on equity lending, short selling, and the economics of information. Specifically, his research on equity lending and short selling examines the causes and results of short sale constraints in opaque markets in order to understand how and when short sale constraints arise. In addition, he has studied the relation between short sales and volatility and he has investigated the impact of information arrival on the volatility of asset prices. His research examining the relation between short sales and public information events was the subject of a 2010 New York Times article and his research examining short sale constraints in opaque markets was the subject of a $10,000 research grant from The Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance. Prior to his academic career, Professor Ringgenberg worked as a consultant for Charles River Associates in Chicago.
Matthew Ringgenberg's Home Page Matthew Ringgenberg's Curriculum Vitae
Email: ringgenberg@wustl.edu
Phone: (314) 935-7171
PhD 2011, University of North Carolina
MS 2009, University of North Carolina
BBA 2003, University of Wisconsin
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