Financial History Review (@fhrjournal) 's Twitter Profile
Financial History Review

@fhrjournal

The Review seeks to embrace a broad approach to financial, banking, and monetary history, which appeals to a wide audience of historians and economists.

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linkhttps://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/financial-history-review calendar_today18-02-2023 16:33:43

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Article published in FHR: "We study the association of shareholder returns with liberalization in government policy during Britain's railway run-up of 1844–5. The findings sustain two main claims". Read more in the paper: cambridge.org/core/journals/…

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We are delighted to announce that all articles accepted for publication in FHR from 10th December 2024 will be ‘open access’, published with a Creative Commons licence and freely available to read online. Caroline Fohlin Aldo Musacchio Gertjan Verdickt cambridge.org/core/journals/…

Carmen Hofmann (@bankinghistory) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🌍📚 Call for Papers | Corporate Heritage Collections Join us in Paris (June 2025) to explore how archives, artifacts, & know-how shape the future of the banking & financial sectors. Submit your abstract by Jan 15, 2025! bankinghistory.org/wp-content/upl… #CorporateHeritage #Preservation

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A big congrats to Tyler Muir on winning the Fischer-Black prize, demonstrating significant original research that is relevant to finance practice! Did you know that Dr. Muir also had a paper in FHR last year? Read more of "1930, First Modern Crisis": cambridge.org/core/journals/…

Finance & History (@financehistory1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why Does the U.S. Lead Investment Banking? 🇺🇸💰 In Episode 7.2 of the #eabhPodcast, Caroline Fohlin (Emory) and Hugo Banziger (eabh) explore: 🔹 How did the U.S. outpace Europe? 🔹 Why is its dominance so resilient? 🔹 The impact of mutual funds, regulations, and political

Why Does the U.S. Lead Investment Banking? 🇺🇸💰
In Episode 7.2 of the #eabhPodcast, <a href="/CarolineFohlin/">Caroline Fohlin</a>  (Emory) and Hugo Banziger (eabh) explore:
🔹 How did the U.S. outpace Europe?
🔹 Why is its dominance so resilient?
🔹 The impact of mutual funds, regulations, and political
Financial History Review (@fhrjournal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The 2025 EABH Annual Meeting takes place in Paris: Thursday, 12 June 2025 Archives, artefacts, and professional practices Call for papers: lnkd.in/esark-NS Friday, 13 June 2025 Public Debt & Financial Stability Call for papers: lnkd.in/eRjpisJ4 Carmen Hofmann

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Did Britain's economic liberalization fuel the 1844–45 railway stock boom? As Parliament embraced free markets, railway shares soared. Policy shift or pure speculation? #History #stockmarket #crash cambridge.org/core/journals/…

Finance & History (@financehistory1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Explore the evolution of #Germany 's financial sector post-#Wirtschaftswunder. Matthias Kemmerer and Carmen Hofmann dive into the era of ‘Gentlemen’s agreements,’ national sovereignty, and global integration. Did these informal deals shield or advance Germany’s economy? Why

Explore the evolution of #Germany 's financial sector post-#Wirtschaftswunder. <a href="/KemmererHistory/">Matthias Kemmerer</a>  and <a href="/bankinghistory/">Carmen Hofmann</a>  dive into the era of ‘Gentlemen’s agreements,’ national sovereignty, and global integration.
Did these informal deals shield or advance Germany’s economy?
Why
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"Who owned Citibank?" New research by Charles Calomiris and Elliot S. M. Oh. They study factors influencing individuals’ decisions to purchase Citibank stock during the 1920s. cambridge.org/core/journals/…

"Who owned Citibank?" New research by Charles Calomiris and Elliot S. M. Oh. They study factors influencing individuals’ decisions to purchase Citibank stock during the 1920s.

cambridge.org/core/journals/…