Biography
Dr. Yuchen Xu is an Assistant Professor (Senior Lecturer) in Finance at UNSW Business School. Previously, she was an Assistant Professor at Peking University HSBC Business School. Dr. Xu completed her undergraduate and postgraduate studies in Paris, where she received dual master's degrees in Financial Engineering (2014) and Economic Psychology (2015). After that, she obtained her Ph.D in Finance from the University of Hong Kong (2020). Her...view more
Dr. Yuchen Xu is an Assistant Professor (Senior Lecturer) in Finance at UNSW Business School. Previously, she was an Assistant Professor at Peking University HSBC Business School. Dr. Xu completed her undergraduate and postgraduate studies in Paris, where she received dual master's degrees in Financial Engineering (2014) and Economic Psychology (2015). After that, she obtained her Ph.D in Finance from the University of Hong Kong (2020). Her research interests span across quantitative financial history and empirical corporate finance. She places special emphasis on identifying the foundational factors that influence the enduring development of finance, in particular at its genesis. Her findings have been published in prestigious international journals, including the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics, and Management Science among others.
My Grants
2022: Young Scientists Fund of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC);
2021: Overseas High-Caliber Personnel Grant
My Awards
2021: Overseas High-Caliber Personnel in Shenzhen;
2020: Membership in Beta Gamma Sigma;
2020: FBE PhD Research Excellence Award at The University of Hong Kong;
My Research Activities
Selected publications:
Lin, C., Ma, C., Sun, Y., & Xu, Y. (2024). The Allocation of Talent and Financial Development, 1897 to 1936. Management Science, forthcoming.
Levine, R., Lin, C., Ma, C., & Xu, Y. (2023). The Legal Origins of Financial Development: Evidence from the Shanghai Concessions. Journal of Finance, 78(6), 3423-3464.
Lin, C., Ma, C., Sun, Y., & Xu, Y. (2021). The telegraph and modern banking development, 1881–1936. Journal of Financial Economics, 141(2), 730-749.
My Teaching
Financial history; Corporate finance