Pablo Triana

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Pablo Triana Portela (born December 4, 1971 ) is a Spanish economist , author and former professor of finance at the ESADE Business School in Barcelona .

Life

Pablo Triana holds a Bachelor (BSc) from the Autonomous University of Barcelona , a Masters (MSc) from New York University and a Magister Artium from American University . Pablo Triana is director of BME Clima , a platform founded in 2011 by the Spanish stock exchange in Madrid as a new business area in the field of climate risk management , which helps companies and institutions to minimize corporate climate risks .

Career

Pablo Triana previously published articles on risk management, derivatives and banking regulation and held various roles in the financial industry. He gained teaching experience at the Instituto de Empresa ( Madrid ) and at the Johns Hopkins University ( Baltimore ). Triana's professional interests include research into derivatives , financial risk management , bank capital regulation, and international finance and macroeconomics .

Criticism of the business schools

Pablo Triana stressed that the 2007-08 banking collapse in the financial world was caused by "a small bunch of guys in a handful of financial institutions" who, he says, were caused by "the prevailing status quo in business schools for the past 50 years" have been badly trained.

About Greece's sovereign debt crisis

Triana published a total of seven articles on the Social Science Research Network in March and April 2017 in which he discussed the Greek sovereign debt crisis . Among other things, he claimed that Greece made money with its debts during the sovereign debt crisis :

“Never in the history of sovereign states has a debtor been treated better than Greece. Taken together, the country receives a negative interest rate for its debts, so the bottom line is that it earns money. "

- Pablo Triana

The article “ Debt That Costs Less Than Nothing: Greece's Unique Opportunity ” was received by the Frankfurter Allgemeine and the news magazine Focus .

Works

He has written three books. The number that killed us (Wiley, 2011), analyzes the role of the value at risk model in unleashing the 2007-08 financial crisis ; Lecturing birds on flying (Wiley, 2009), discusses the effects quantitative theoretical models can have on real financial markets; and Corporate derivatives (Risk Books, 2006), examines the use of derivatives by non-financial corporations.

Individual evidence

  1. BME pone en marcha 'BME Clima', un proyecto de gestión del riesgo climático . europapress.es. Accessed May 7, 2017 (Spanish)
  2. Why should I be interested in bank capital ?, led by Pablo Triana . esade.edu. Accessed on May 6, 2017 (English)
  3. Buffett Vs. The Black Swan . forbes.com. Accessed May 7, 2017 (English)
  4. ARE BUSINESS SCHOOLS TO BLAME FOR THE CRISIS? . Newsweek July 31, 2009
  5. Pablo Triana: The AAA-ization of Greek Debt , March 8, 2017, SSRN.
  6. Pablo Triana: Greek Myths , April 25, 2017, SSRN.
  7. Pablo Triana: Eurozone Bailouts: Greece's Least Austere Period in Modern Times , March 4, 2017, SSRN.
  8. Pablo Triana: The Big Fat Greek Swindle , April 7, 2017, SSRN.
  9. Pablo Triana: Greek Bailouts: Debunking the 'Foreign Banks' Myth , March 2017, SSRN.
  10. ^ Pablo Triana: Greece's Negative Coupon Bond . March 14, 2017, SSRN.
  11. Pablo Triana: Debt That Costs Less Than Nothing: Greece's Unique Opportunity , March 26, 2017, SSRN.
  12. Debt That Costs Less Than Nothing: Greece's Unique Opportunity . poseidon001.ssrn.com. Accessed May 8, 2017 (English)
  13. Does Greece make money with its debts? Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung from May 6, 2017.
  14. Spanish economist calculates - Not because of austerity: Greece even earns money with its debts , Focus , May 7, 2017.
  15. Books by Pablo Triana . amazon.com. Accessed May 7, 2017 (English)

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