About Meetings Contacts Links
Annual Meeting

2010 Registration   

2010 Paper
Submissions
   

Program   

ProgramCommittee   

2009 Sponsors   

PhD Student Stipends   


Program: 

  Year 2009 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2008 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2007 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2006 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2005 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2004 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2003 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2002 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2001 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 2000 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1999 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1998 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1997 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1996 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1995 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1994 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1993 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1992 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1991 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1990 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1989 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1988 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1987 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1986 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1985 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1984 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1983 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1982 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1981 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1980 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1979 Final Program (pdf)

  Year 1978 Final Program (pdf)



Best Paper Award Winners from previous Meetings:


All paper awards for 2001 - 2008 (pdf)

The Trefftzs Award
for the best student paper

2002
On the Performance of Mutual Fund Managers
Klaas P. Baks, Emory University

2001
Internal and External Capital Markets
Urs C. Peyer, University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill

2000
Bureaucracy: The Link Between Corporate Employment Composition and Financial Performance
David Wessels, University of California at Los Angeles


The Society of Quantitative Analysts Award 
for the student paper of most relevance to quantitative practitioners.

2002
Does the Market Conspire Against the Weak?
An Empirical Study of Front Running Behavior During the LTCM Crisis

Fang Cai, University of Michigan

 

Caesarea Center Award
for the best paper on Risk Management

2002
Exotics and Electrons: Electric Power Crises and Financial Risk Management

Suman Banerjee & Tom Noe, Tulane University

 

AAII.com

American Association of Individual Investors Award
for the best paper on investments

2001
Do Behavioral Biases Affect Prices
Joshua D. Coval & Tyler Shumway, Universuity of Michigan

2000
How Large is the Inflation Risk Premium in the U.S. Nominal Term Structure?
Andrea Buraschi and Alexei Jiltsov, London Business School


NASDAQ Award
for the best paper on capital formation

2002
Does Local Financial Development Matter?
Luigi Guiso, University of Sassari, Ente Luigi Einaudi, and CEPR
Paola Sapienza, Northwestern University and CEPR
Luigi Zingales, University of Chicago, NBER, and CEPR

2001
Busted IPOs and Windows of Misopportunity
Lynn Foster-Johnson, Tuck School of Business, Craig Lewis, Owen Graduate School of Management and James K. Seward, University of Wisconsin-Madison

2000
The Making of a Dealer Market: From Entry to Equilibrium in the Trading of Nasdaq Stocks
Katrina Ellis, Cornell University and Australian Graduate School of Management, Roni Michaely, and Maureen O'Hara, Cornell University


NYSE Euronext Award
for the best paper on equity trading

2002
Securities Lending, Shorting, and Pricing
Darrell Duffie, Stanford
Nicolae Garleanu, INSEAD
Lasse Heje Pedersen, New York University

2001
Electronic Communications Networks and Market Quality Michael J. Barclay & Terence Hendershott, University of Rochester and D. Timothy McCormick, NASD

2000
The Dynamics of Emerging Market Equity Flows
Geert Bekaert, Columbia University, Campbell Harvey, Duke University and NBER and Robin Lumsdaine, Brown University and NBER


WFA Corporate Finance Award
for the best corporate finance paper

2002
Optimal Imprecision and Ignorance
Chandra Kanodia, Rajdeep Singh & Andrew Spero, University of Minnesota

2001
Optimal Long-Term Financial Contracting with Privately Observed Cash Flows
Peter DeMarzo, Stanford University & Michael Fishman, Northwestern University

2000
Does Corporate Diversification Destroy Value?
John Graham, Duke University, Michael Lemmon, Arizona State University, and Jack Wolf, University of Utah