Biography
Noam Tanner is a financial economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. His research interests include financial intermediation, banking supervision, information economics, and industrial organization. Noam joined the Boston Fed in 2015 after he received his Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University. He also holds an A.B. in Mathematics from Princeton University.
Publications
Published papers
"Swing Pricing Calibration: Using ETFs to Infer Swing Factors for Mutual Funds" (with Kenechukwu Anadu, John Levin, Victoria Liu, Antoine Malfroy-Camine, and Sean Baker), forthcoming at Financial Analysts Journal, 2023.
"Demand Elasticity for Deposit Services at U.S. Retail Banks in High and Low Rate Environments" (with Danielle Zanzalari, Mark Manion, and Eric Haavind-Berman), Applied Economics: 53 (47), 5448-5461, 2021.
Working Papers
"Swing Pricing Calibration: A Simple Thought Exercise Using ETF Pricing Dynamics to Infer Swing Factors for Mutual Funds", Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
"Optimal Delegation Under Unknown Bias: The Role of Concavity", Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.