I am an assistant professor of finance at the D’Amore-McKim School of Business at Northeastern University. Currently, my research interests are in market mispricing and financial intermediation. I am very interested in understanding how market frictions ultimately impact consumers by constraining large financial intermediaries, such as insurance companies, municipals, and broker-dealers. As an example, in a recent paper published in Review of Financial Studies, we study how state regulators affected the adjustment of prices in the long-term care insurance (LTCI) market, and ultimately, contributed to the dwindling supply of LTCI products.
I received a PhD in business economics from Harvard University, and I earned a Bachelor's degree from the University of Chicago, double majoring in economics and statistics. Prior to the PhD, I worked 2 years as a research analyst in the Capital Markets group in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.