Tim Eisert
Tim Eisert
Associate Professor with "Agregação"
Finance

Tim Eisert is an Associate Professor of Finance and a CEPR Research Affiliate. He studies financial intermediation, monetary policy, and corporate finance. His work has been published in leading academic journals including the Journal of Finance, the Review of Financial Studies, and Management Science. Tim earned his Ph.D. from Goethe University in 2014, an Assistant and Associate professor at the Erasmus University Rotterdam. 

2014 - PhD in Finance, Goethe University Frankfurt

2009 - Degree in Economics and Business Economics, Goethe University Frankfurt

Financial intermediation, monetary policy, corporate finance

  • Eisert, Tim, Acharya, Viral V., Crosignani, Matteo, Eufinger, Christian (2023). Zombie credit and (dis-)inflation: Evidence from Europe. (Accepted/In press) Journal of Finance.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Bergant, Katharina, Crosignani, Matteo, Eisert, Tim, Mccann, Fergal (2022). The anatomy of the transmission of macroprudential policies. Journal of Finance, 77 (5), 2533-2575.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Crosignani, Matteo, Eisert, Tim, Steffen, Sascha (2022). Zombie Lending: Theoretical, International, and Historical Perspectives. Annual Review of Financial Economics, 14, 21-38.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian, Hirsch, Christian (2019). Whatever it takes: The real effects of unconventional monetary policy. Review Of Financial Studies, 32 (9), 3366-3411.
  • Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian (2019). Interbank networks and backdoor bailouts: Benefiting from other banks' government guarantees. Management Science, 65 (8), 3673-3693.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian, Hirsch, Christian (2018). Real effects of the sovereign debt crisis in Europe: Evidence from syndicated loans. Review Of Financial Studies, 31 (8), 2855-2896.
  • Acharya, Viral V., Eisert, Tim, Eufinger, Christian, Hirsch, Christian (2018). Same story, different place? Post-crisis recapitalization of banks in Japan and Europe. Finance and Investment. : The European Case. Oxford University Press, 137-147.