Man

Thomas Martin Smith

Head of Applied Finance and Actuarial Sciences

Macquarie University

Sydney, Australia

Líneas de Investigación


Corporate Finance, Options, Environmental Finance

Educación

  •  Commerce, UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND. Australia, 1980
  •  Finance, UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND. Australia, 1982
  •  Finance, STANFORD UNIVERSITY. Estados Unidos, 1990

Experiencia Académica

  •   Head of Applied Finance and Actuarial Science Full Time

    MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY

    Business and Economics

    Sydney, Australia

    2017 - A la fecha

  •   Frank Finn Professor of Finance Full Time

    UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND

    Business, Economics and Law

    Brisbane, Australia

    2012 - 2017

  •   Professor of Finance Full Time

    AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY

    Canberra, Australia

    2002 - 2012

  •   Professor of Finance Full Time

    UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES

    Sydney, Chile

    1995 - 2002

  •   Associate Professor of Finance Full Time

    DUKE UNIVERSITY

    Durham, Estados Unidos

    1992 - 1995

  •   Assistant Professor of Finance Full Time

    DUKE UNIVERSITY

    Durham, Estados Unidos

    1988 - 1992

  •   Tutor Group IV in Accounting Full Time

    UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND

    Brisbane, Australia

    1977 - 1981

Premios y Distinciones

  •   The unpaid social cost of carbon: introducing a framework to estimate “legal looting” in the fossil fuel industry

    MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY

    Australia, 2019

    Awarded for the article ' The unpaid social cost of carbon: introducing a framework to estimate “legal looting” in the fossil fuel industry ' published in Accounting Research Journal


 

Article (38)

A general equilibrium approach to pricing volatility risk
A Primer on Global Environmental Change
How markets will drive the transition to a low carbon economy
Independently-certified industry-specific disclosures to the capital market: The JORC Code in the Australian mining industry The JORC Code Disclosures to the Capital Market
Responsible science: Celebrating the 50-year legacy of Ball and Brown (1968) using a registration-based framework.
The wealth effects of the announcement of the Australian carbon pricing scheme
A review of the return-illiquidity relationship
Adaptation of MSMEs to climate change: a review of the existing literature in Private-sector action in adaptation: Perspectives on the role of micro, small and medium size enterprises
Business studies and the environment
Dividend persistence and dividend behaviour
The unpaid social cost of carbon: Introducing a framework to estimate “legal looting” in the fossil fuel industry
Big data techniques in auditing research and practice: Current trends and future opportunities
Research in Finance: A Review of Influential Publications and a Research Agenda
Accounting Research in Abacus, A&F, AAR and AJM from 2008-2015: A Review and a Research Agenda
Are we impaired?
Comments and Rejoinders to Shan and Walter: Towards a set of design principles for executive compensation contracts
Emerging trends in Asia-Pacific finance research: a review of recent influential publications and a research agenda
Environmental finance: a research agenda for interdisciplinary finance research
Errata to: A Review of Accounting Research in the Asia Pacific Region
Reply to So, who really is a “noted author” within the accounting literature? A reflection on Benson et. al.. (2015)
A review of accounting research in the Asia Pacific region
Divestment from fossil fuel companies: Confluence between policy and strategic viewpoints
Editorial to 40th issue of AJM
Endogeneity in Accounting and Finance Research: Natural Experiments as a State-of-the-Art Solution
Injecting liquidity into liquidity research
Qualitative theory in finance: Theory into practice
Fifty years of finance research in the Asia Pacific Basin
Qualitative research in finance
Using Option Prices to Infer Overpayments and Synergies in M Transactions
Why the CAPM is Half-Right and Everything Else is Wrong
The simultaneous relation between fund flows and returns
Common divisors, payout persistence, and return predictability
Political regimes, business cycles, seasonalities, and returns
Editorial to Special Issue on Delegated Portfolio Management
Regulation fair disclosure and the cost of adverse selection
The persistent presidential dummy - Differences turn out to be insignificant.
Ownership, competition, and financial disclosure
Modeling the bid/ask spread: measuring the inventory-holding premium
38
Thomas Smith

Head of Applied Finance and Actuarial Sciences

Applied Finance

Macquarie University

Sydney, Australia