Matthew Pritsker

photo of Matthew Pritsker
Financial Economist
Risk and Policy Analysis Unit
Supervision, Regulation and Credit
T: 617-973-3191
F: 617-619-7475
Matthew.Pritsker@bos.frb.org
 
Primary fields of research:
Asset pricing, market microstructure, risk management

Matt Pritsker is a financial economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. His research is in the areas of asset pricing, market microstructure, risk measurement and management, and banking. His most recent research is on the design of systemic-risk stress tests for the banking system. Other recent papers are on Knightian uncertainty in interbank markets, and on how securitization affects banking. Other research papers are on market liquidity, financial contagion, and financial econometrics. 

Matt earned a BA in economics from the University of Michigan in 1986, and a Ph.D.in economics from Princeton University in 1992.

  • Publications & Working Papers
  • Education
  • Work Experience

Publications & Working Papers

Informational Easing: Improving Credit Conditions through the Release of Information,” Economic Policy Review, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, (August 2010): 77-87.

“The Hidden Dangers of Historical Simulation,” The Journal of Banking and Finance (2006): 561-582.

''A Rational Expectations Model of Financial Contagion," with Laura E. Kodres, The Journal of Finance, vol. 57 (April 2002): 769-99.

''Improving Grid-Based Methods for Estimating Value at Risk of Fixed Income Portfolios,'' with Michael S. Gibson, The Journal of Risk, vol. 3 (Winter 2000/2001): 65-89.

'The Channels for Financial Contagion,'' in Stijn Claessens, Kristin J. Forbes, eds., International Financial Contagion. Boston/Dordrecht/London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2001.

''Nonparametric Density Estimation and Tests of Continuous-Time Interest Rate Models,'' The Review of Financial Studies, vol. 11 (Fall 1998): 449-487.

''Evaluating Value at Risk Methodologies: Accuracy versus Computational Time,'' Journal of Financial Services Research, vol. 12 (1997): 201-242.

''Liquidity Risk and Positive Feedback,'' in The Measurement of Aggregate Market Risk. Basel: Bank for International Settlements, 1997.

Directionally Similar Position Taking and Herding by Large Futures Market Participants,'' with Laura E. Kodres, in Risk Measurement and Systemic Risk. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 1996.

''The Hidden Dangers of Historical Simulation,'' Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2001-27. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2001.

Education

Ph.D., Economics, Princeton University, 1992

M.A., Economics, Princeton University, 1988

B.A., Economics, University of Michigan, 1986

Work Experience

Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Financial Economist, December 2011–
Visitor, RPA Unit, June–December 2011
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
1991-2011
New York University Stern School of Business
Visiting Scholar, January– May 2009
New York University Stern School of Business
Visiting Professor, September–December 2008
Johns Hopkins University
Adjunct Professor of Economics, Spring 2006, Spring 2007, Spring 2008
University of California at Berkeley
Visiting Professor, January-May 2001
Georgetown University,
Adjunct Professor of Economics, 1996-1997

 

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