Call for Papers: Thirteenth Oxford Financial Intermediation Theory Conference (OxFIT)

Conference dates

15 Sep 2025 - 16 Sep 2025

Location

Saïd Business School, University of Oxford

Description

You are invited to submit a paper for the thirteenth Oxford Financial Intermediation Theory Conference (OxFIT). The conference will be held in person at the Saïd Business School, Oxford, on 15-16 September 2025. A guide to the topics and submission details are outlined below.

Topics
We are inviting high quality submissions in the area of Financial Intermediation Theory. This conference aims to bring together contributions on topics including the following:
• Financial crises
• Governance of Financial Institutions
• The role of central banks and regulators
• Financial innovation
• International regulatory coordination
• Certification in financial markets

Paper submission procedure
The deadline for submissions is 22 April 2025. The submission fee is £65. Papers should be submitted electronically using the online form at: https://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/events/thirteenth-oxford-financial-intermediation-theory-conference-oxfit

Additional Information

Acceptance decisions will be made by the second half of May.

We provide accommodation and lunches and dinners for invited participants. Unfortunately, we cannot cover travel expenses.

Organisers
• Alan Morrison, Saïd Business School, Oxford
• Joel Shapiro, Saïd Business School, Oxford

Programme Committee
• Wolf Wagner, University of Rotterdam
• Frederic Malherbe, University College London
• John Kuong, Chinese University of Hong Kong
• Hongda Zhong, University of Texas - Dallas
• Gyongyi Loranth, Universität Wien
• Max Bruche, Humboldt Universitat
• Thomas Noe, Saïd Business School, Oxford
• Jing Zeng, University of Bonn
• Sergio Vicente, University of Luxembourg
• Vincent Maurin, HEC Paris
• David Skeie, Warwick University
• Kebin Ma, Warwick University
• Peter Zimmerman, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
• Jens Josephson, Stockholm University
• Xuan Wang, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
• Matthieu Bouvard, Toulouse School of Economics
• Alessio Piccolo, Indiana University
• Ansgar Walther, Imperial University
• Thomas Eisenbach, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
• Ken Deng, Saïd Business School, Oxford