Journal of Financial Intermediation

Papers
(The median citation count of Journal of Financial Intermediation is 3. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-06-01 to 2025-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
Editorial Board160
Liquidity from two lending facilities131
Carrot and stick: A role for benchmark-adjusted compensation in active fund management53
Editorial Board40
Intermediary frictions and convertible bond pricing34
Finance and inequality: The distributional impacts of bank credit rationing32
Private deposit insurance, deposit flows, bank lending, and moral hazard30
On stock-based loans28
Financial technology and relationship lending: Complements or substitutes?22
The company you keep: Investment adviser clientele and mutual fund performance✰21
Pre-publication revisions of bank financial statements: A novel way to monitor banks?21
Douglas Gale’s contribution to social learning, decision under risk and uncertainty, monotone games and networks19
Bank use of sovereign CDS in the Eurozone crisis: Hedging and risk incentives17
Large banks and small firm lending17
The impact of bank regulation on the cost of credit: Evidence from a discontinuity in capital requirements16
The effect of the Federal Reserve’s lending facility on PPP lending by commercial banks14
Bank stability and the price of loan commitments14
Fintech in the time of COVID−19: Technological adoption during crises14
Interbank connections, contagion and bank distress in the Great Depression✰14
Whose bailout is it anyway? The roles of politics in PPP bailouts of small businesses vs. banks14
Securitization and optimal foreclosure13
Information disclosure and the feedback effect in capital markets13
The riskiness of credit allocation and financial stability12
Effects of financing constraints on maintenance investments in rent-stabilized apartments12
Editorial Board11
Intergenerational bankruptcy risks: Learning from parents’ mistakes11
Fund ownership, wealth, and risk-taking: Evidence on private equity managers11
What do we learn from ratings about corporate social responsibility? New evidence of uninformative ratings11
Financial intermediation services and competition analyses: Review and paths forward for improvement11
Douglas Gale's contribution to banking, financial economics and financial crises10
Institutional Shareholders and Bank Capital10
Editorial Board10
Editorial Board10
Editorial Board10
Liquidity and price pressure in the corporate bond market: evidence from mega-bonds9
Private equity and Covid-199
Safe but fragile: Information acquisition, liquidity support and redemption runs8
Venture Capital Coordination in Syndicates, Corporate Monitoring, and Firm Performance8
Editorial Board8
Ethics, capital and talent competition in banking7
Testing dividend tax theory: Firm and industry heterogeneity7
The agency of CoCos: Why contingent convertible bonds are not for everyone7
The informational impact of prudential regulations7
Editorial Board7
The costs of corporate debt overhang6
Securitization and aggregate investment efficiency6
Firm-level ESG information and active fund management6
COVID-19, policy interventions and credit: The Brazilian experience6
Villains or scapegoats? The role of subprime borrowers in driving the U.S. housing boom5
Economic policy uncertainty and bank liquidity hoarding5
Cost of monitoring and risk taking in the money market funds industry5
Collateral requirements and corporate policy decisions5
Two shades of opacity: Hidden orders and dark trading5
Asset scarcity and collateral rehypothecation5
The flight from maturity5
Window dressing of regulatory metrics: Evidence from repo markets5
Who Values Economist Forecasts? Evidence From Trading in Treasury Markets5
The wolves of Wall Street? Managerial attributes and bank risk4
The Costs and Benefits of Performance Fees in Mutual Funds4
Surviving the perfect storm: The role of the lender of last resort☆4
Can information imprecision be valuable? The case of credit ratings4
Editorial Board4
Corporate Inversions and Governance4
The real effects of relationship lending✰4
Management insulation and bank failures4
What lies beneath—Negative interest rates and bank lending4
The external effects of bank executive pay: Liquidity creation and systemic risk3
Scope and limits of bank liquidity creation3
The information content from lending relationships across the supply chain3
Moral hazard and debt maturity3
Editorial Board3
Editorial Board3
Monetary policy effects in times of negative interest rates: What do bank stock prices tell us?3
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