Department of Finance
The Department of Finance aims to produce financial research, teaching, and communication of international standard and of relevance for the Danish society.
About the department (Panel content)
Who we are
The Department of Finance conducts research across all major areas of finance, including financial markets, securities pricing, risk management, corporate finance, and household finance. We also provide high-quality teaching within a wide range of full-time and part-time programmes offered at Copenhagen Business School.
3 research centres
280+ employees
5 focus areas
“ I would definitely recommend a PhD at BIGFI, it is really an amazing department and as a PhD Student, I think it is one of the best places ” Theis Ingerslev Jensen
Centres at the department
Learn more about our research centres at Department of Finance, where knowledge is created through research and collaboration.
Collaboration and outreach
We make a difference
The Department of Finance at Copenhagen Business School plays a vital role in advancing knowledge, shaping policy, and strengthening the financial ecosystem in Denmark and beyond. Through cutting-edge research, high-quality teaching, and strong industry collaboration, the department contributes meaningfully to both academic excellence and real-world impact.
Our researchers generate insights that help society understand how financial markets function, how households make economic decisions, and how firms can allocate capital responsibly. This knowledge supports better decision-making among policymakers, regulators, and private institutions. By addressing challenges such as market stability, risk management, sustainable investing, and financial inclusion, the department’s work directly informs public debate and contributes to a more resilient economy.
The department also makes a difference through talent development. We educate the next generation of financial leaders—students who combine strong analytical skills with ethical awareness and the ability to navigate an increasingly complex financial world. Through innovative teaching methods and close integration with industry practice, we prepare graduates to create value in banks, asset management firms, corporations, government agencies, and international organizations.
Finally, the department’s strong connections with industry partners ensure that research findings are translated into practice. Whether through executive education, advisory roles, or collaborative projects, we bring academic rigor to real-world problems and help organizations adapt to emerging trends in finance.
In everything we do, the Department of Finance aims to contribute to a healthier economy, a more informed society, and a financial sector capable of supporting sustainable growth.
About us
Strategy
The Department of Finance aims to deliver world-class research, education, and public communication — combining scientific excellence with social relevance.
Its research spans financial markets, asset pricing, risk management, corporate finance, and household finance — covering the most important financial decisions at both firm and individual level.
The Department also seeks to harness cutting-edge methods and data, for example through initiatives like the Center for Big Data in Finance (BIGFI) and the previous Center for Financial Frictions (FRIC), to generate new insights into finance, stability, and the economic role of markets and households.
Through its educational programmes and PhD training, the Department develops future financial professionals and researchers capable of applying rigorous theory, empirical methods, and critical thinking to real-world economic challenges.
Head of Department
Our Head of Department is Carsten Sørensen.
Through his leadership, research and teaching, Carsten Sørensen plays a key role in shaping both the academic direction of the Department of Finance and its societal impact. Ranging from rigorous scholarship to strategic institutional responsibilities, he helps ensure that the department remains at the forefront of financial research and education.
History
The Department of Finance at Copenhagen Business School has a long academic tradition, dating back to 1939. Over more than eight decades, it has evolved from a small academic unit into one of Denmark’s leading centres for research and education in finance.
Throughout its history, the department has expanded its research agenda in line with developments in financial markets and the broader economy. What began with a focus on classical corporate finance and financial theory has grown to include modern areas such as asset pricing, risk management, household finance, and data-driven empirical research.
The department has also become a key contributor to CBS’s teaching programmes, educating generations of students and researchers and strengthening ties to the financial sector, policymakers, and international research communities.
Today, the department builds on its long heritage while continuing to develop new knowledge and insights that shape both academic thinking and real-world financial practice.
Events at the Department of Finance
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Research and publications (Panel content)
Our research
Research at the Department of Finance is driven by a commitment to advancing knowledge at the forefront of modern finance. Our work spans five core areas: financial markets, asset pricing, risk management, corporate finance and household finance - reflecting the breadth and depth of the discipline. Through rigorous empirical and theoretical research, we aim to shed light on how financial systems operate, how individuals and firms make decisions, and how risks can be better understood and managed. Collaboration across disciplines and active engagement with industry and policymakers ensure that our research remains both academically robust and directly relevant to the challenges facing today’s financial landscape. By combining scientific excellence with real-world impact, we contribute to shaping a more efficient, resilient and well-informed financial sector.
Publications
See all publicationsDecember 2025
The Dichotomy of Networking and Syndication
Evidence From the United States
Ankur Mehra
Rama Seth, Associate Professor
14 November 2025
AI kan være et økonomisk mirakel eller en bombe under børsen
Her er, hvad krise-professoren holder øje med
Jesper Rangvid, Professor
Therese Moreau
Our research units
Externally funded projects
Center for Big Data in Finance (BIGFI)
About the project: The Center for Big Data in Finance (BIGFI) will seek to generate a fundamentally new understanding of finance based on the rapid increase in available data combined with the revolution in data science and computing power. The center has a unique opportunity to leverage the synergies of combining leading experts on financial markets with leading experts on economic agents (households and financial institutions) using the broadest data (global market data across asset classes) and the deepest data (complete Danish register data, regulatory data, and proprietary data from two major financial institutions) available anywhere in the world. Our big finance data research will shed new light on financial markets’ role in promoting stability and economic activity, replication crises in finance, the role of financial markets in the green transition, the role of machine learning in finance, households’ obstacles for financial security, and how social networks affect financial markets.
Funder: Danish National Research Foundation (DNRF) /Danmarks Grundforskningsfond (DG)
Date: from 01.01.2023 to 31.12.2028
Coordinator: Lasse Heje Pedersen
Grant amount: DKK 59,760,000
DNRF Chair
About the project: Financial markets play a decisive role in the economy. When firms decide whether to build a new factory, invest in green technologies, or pursue innovation, much depends on the cost of raising capital. This “cost of capital” is a central driver of economic activity – yet it is difficult to measure and often misunderstood. In theory, firms should make investment decisions based on a clear assessment of their cost of capital. In practice, Niels Gormsen’s research shows that reality looks different. Firms’ perceptions often diverge from what economic models assume, and these differences matter. They affect how firms invest, how they respond to monetary policy, and how they engage with major societal challenges, such as climate change. By shedding light on how firms actually perceive and apply the cost of capital, we gain new insights into the dynamics linking financial markets, business decisions, and the broader economy. The goal is to advance fundamental knowledge of how the cost of capital and interest rates shape investment and economic dynamics – and thereby play a crucial role in how the economy of the future takes form.
Funder: Danish National Research Foundation (DNRF) /Danmarks Grundforskningsfond (DG)
Date: from 01.09.2025 to 30.09.2028
Coordinator: Niels Joachim Gormsen
Grant amount: DKK 9,590,000
The Financial Gender Gap (Gender in finance)
About the project: : The financial gender gap, i.e., the well-established gender differences in financial decisions, has been the subject of much recent discussion and debate. We know little about what drives this gap though. Because the financial decisions of individuals play an extensive role in determining welfare in all stages of life, the identification of the contributing factors is of crucial importance. This is the pioneering goal of Gender-in-Finance. The overall concept and central contributions of Gender-in-Finance are the following: (1) the project innovates by creating a unique panel data set, comprised of a rich set of experimental measures, including beliefs, expectations, preferences, and the decision-making abilities of individuals, merged with a panel of detailed high-frequency transaction-level bank data, capturing both real-world financial decisions and constraints of individuals. This will data set will enable the identification of the factors that contribute the most to the financial gender gap in reality; (2) using this data set, the project offers ground-breaking, evidence-based understanding of the gender differences in financial-choices along several dimensions that contribute to financial well-being; (3) by identifying the factors that contribute to the gender gap in financial choices the project informs the development of models of financial decision making. Ultimately, this research agenda will shed light on what drives gender differences in financial decision making as well as which policies may be effective in narrowing these gaps.
Funder: Horizon Europe
Date: from 01.08.2025 to 31.07.2030
Coordinator: Arna Olafsson
Grant amount: DKK 11,200,000
Financial Mistakes
About the project: x
Funder: Danmarks Frie Forskningsfond
Date: from 01.07.2023 to 31.06.2026
Coordinator: Kasper Meisner Nielsen
Grant amount: DKK x
Households and the Housing Market
About the project: x
Funder: Danmarks Frie Forskningsfond
Date: from 01.08.2023 to 30.07.2027
Coordinator: Kathrin Schlafmann
Grant amount: DKK x
Pension Research Centre (PeRCent)
About the project: The mission of the Pension Research Centre (PeRCent) is to create interest and knowledge about pension issues and through research, teaching and intermediation to contribute to the development of the pension system in Denmark. The activities of PeRCent are funded jointly in cooperation between CBS and partners from the pension sector in Denmark. A key objective of the Pension Research Centre (PeRCent) is to make high-quality contributions in the pension research area, through publications in books and leading scientific journals in economics and finance. While research is the cornerstone of PeRCent’s activities, the centre should also be judged on its ability to contribute to a qualified debate on pension policies in Denmark and internationally. In fact, by collaborating with government departments and agencies, pension funds and insurance companies, domestic and international organisations etc., PeRCent seeks to obtain impact of its research on policy and practice.
Funder: ATP, Velliv Foreningen, Sampension, Pædagogernes Pension, Pension Danmark, PFA Pension, P+, Nordea Pension, Akademiker Pension, AP Pension, Danica Pension, Lærernes Pension, PenSam, PKA A/S, Lægernes Pension, Industriens Pension
Date: From 2014 to 2029
Coordinators: Jesper Rangvid
Co-coordinator: Svend E. Hougaard Jensen
Grant amount:
- 2014 - 2019: 10,461,000 DKK
- 2020 – 2024: 14,500,000 DKK
- 2025 – 2029: 7,350,000 DKK
Redaktion af Finans/Invest
About the project: The project consists of the Department of Finance staffing the editorial position for the professional journal Finans/Invest. The grant is intended to ensure that the editorial position is filled by a qualified professional who is independent of special interests, etc. Finans/Invest is a recognized Danish finance journal that publishes articles on investment, finance, and capital intermediation, as well as related legislation. Finans/Invest is published six times a year.
Funder: Finansforeningen/CFA Society Denmark
Date: Ongoing since 2014
Coordinators: Carsten Sørensen and Ken L. Bechmann
Grant amount: DKK 125,000 per year
Who is financing innovation and entrepreneurs? Acomprehensive study of investors in innovation and new firms
About the project: x
Funder: Nasdaq Nordic Foundation
Date: from 01.06.2025 to 30.09.2027
Coordinator: Katarina Ibert Warg
Grant amount: DKK x
Financial data
Academic Corporate Bond TRACE Data
Trace captures and disseminates information on secondary market transactions in corporate bonds issued in the US. The Academic Corporate Bond TRACE data is available on a 36-month delayed basis and include masked identifying information regarding the dealer reporting each transaction. In addition, the product includes a security identifier, execution date and time, price, yield, quantity, commission, buy or sell, and principal or agency capacity. The standard TRACE data set provides transaction-level data on an 18-month delayed basis but does not include any dealer-identifying information.
Access: Contact Peter Feldhütter for access.
Bankscope
Information on worldwide banking and financial markets. Comprises 30.000 banks.
Access: Bankscope at CBS Library here.
Bloomberg
Global financial market data and news. The Bloomberg terminal is an integrated platform providing access to price quotes, financial market and trade data, news, and more.
Access: the Department of Finance has three Bloomberg terminals in our Bloomberg terminal room - Peter Feldhütter is the contact person. CBS students have access through the Bloomberg terminals in the CBS library.
CBOE Livevol data: VX intraday data
Data contains intraday bids, asks, volumes, and transacted prices for VIX futures for the period 1.11.2010- 20.10.2017
Access: Only for Department of Finance faculty and PhD students. Contact Ida Listh for access.
CBOE VIX Options
In 2006, options on the Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) began trading on the Cboe Options Exchange. The VIX options contract is the first product on market volatility to be listed on an SEC-regulated securities exchange. End of Day VIX Options
CBOE End of Day VIX Options data provides quotes sampled at 15:45 Chicago time for the spectrum of strikes in additional to total volume, VWAP open, close, high, and lows and open interest.
Sample Period is 2006.3 – 2018.1. Contact Paul Whelan for details.
CME / CBOT
Data contains intra day time and sales quotes, bids, asks, volumes, and transacted prices for futures and options (puts and calls all outstanding) on the 2, 5, 10 and 30 year Treasury futures contracts (all outstanding) and S&P E-mini and S&P (Big) futures contract (all outstanding)
Access: Only for Department of Finance faculty and PhD students. Contact Paul Whelan for details.
Compustat
Fundamental and market information on publicly held companies. It consists of Compustat North America, Compustat Global and Compustat Emerging Markets.
Access: WRDS
Creditflux CLO-I
CLO-I contains information about Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs) which are gathered from trustee reports and mapped bond and loan issuers.
Access: For all CBS faculty and students. Contact Ida Listh for access.
CRSP
The Center for Research in Security Prices (CRSP) maintains a comprehensive collection of security price, return, and volume data for the NYSE, AMEX and NASDAQ stock markets. It consists of the US Stock Database, the Indices Database, US Treasury and Inflation Series, Mutual Funds, The CRSP/Compustat Merged Database and the CRSP/Ziman Real Estate Data Series.
Access: WRDS
EIKON/Datastream
Current and historical financial and economic information, including data on stocks, bonds, derivatives, currencies, trusts, and macroeconomic issues.
Access: Through the EIKON/Datastream application which must be installed on the computer. EIKON/Datastream can also be accessed through an Excel plugin. For students, EIKON/Datastream is available in the Learning Ressource Center in the CBS Library. EIKON/Datastream is also installed on a PC in our Bloomberg terminal room at the Department.
eMAXX
Quarterly corporate bond portfolio holdings for US insurance companies, mutual funds, and pension funds. The data are on a portfolio level within each institution and run from 2002 to 2011.
Access: Only for Department of Finance faculty and PhD students. Contact Jens Dick-Nielsen
Eurofidai
Stock data, stock index data, exchange rates mutual fund data and corporate events from Europe, Asia, Pacific and the Middle East.
Access: https://www.eurofidai.org/ (data access is password protected). Contact Ida Listh to acquire access to this database
Execucomp
Tracks executive compensation in S&P 1000 firms. Top executives' salary, bonus, and stock option data.
Access: WRDS. Under Compustat Quarterly Updates.
Factiva
Business information from 1.200 newspapers, 6.500 journals and trade magazines, and 350 news agencies as well as financial information about 23.000 listed companies worldwide. Covers 118 countries and 22 languages.
Access: Factiva at CBS Library here.
Finanswatch
FinansWatch contains different kinds of news about financial sector people and companies, including profiles, interviews, career information etc. in Danish. The articles are targeted at the sector itself and are written from a specifically Danish perspective.
Access: http://finanswatch.dk/
ISSM
Tick-by-tick data covering NYSE and AMEX between 1983 and 1992, and NASDAQ between 1987 and 1992.
Access: WRDS
Markit
Markit’s single-name and index CDS pricing and reference data use contributions from global institutions. Markit’s growing set of asset classes is used throughout the industry for mark-to-market, research reference, risk control and forecasting activities.
Access: WRDS
Mergent FISD
The Mergent Fixed Income Securities Database (FISD) is a comprehensive database of publicly-offered U.S. bonds.
Access: WRDS
OptionMetrics
OptionMetrics is a comprehensive source of historical price and implied volatility data divided into two databases. The IvyDB Database contains historical prices and options for US equity and the index option market and their associated underlying instruments, correctly calculated implied volatilities, and option sensitivities. Historical data are available from January 1996 until December 2015. Similarly, the IvyDB Europe database contains historical prices and options on European equities and indices from all mayor European exchanges. Historical data are available from January 2002 until December 2015.
Access: WRDS
Orbis
Company database comprising information about more than 65 million companies worldwide, including 241.000 Danish companies. Also covers the banking and insurance sectors.
Access: Orbis at CBS Library here.
Risk.net
Financial Risk Management news and analyses, including risk management, derivatives, and complex financial products.
Access: http://www.risk.net/ (campus only)
SDC Platinum Deals Module
The deals module consists of the Mergers & Acquisitions database and the New Issues database. The databases contain information on new equity and bond issues, M&A, syndicated loans, private equity, project finance, corporate governance and shareholder activism.
Access. Thomson One Banker
S&P Capital IQ, Capital Structure
The database provides extensive data on debt capital structure for over 60,000 global public and private companies and equity capital structure data on over 80,000 active and inactive companies worldwide.
Access: WRDS
SNL (Bank and Insurance data)
SNL provides fundamental coverage of banking institutions and insurance companies. Bank fundamental coverage provides data on performance analysis, asset quality, regulatory capital, and deposit/loan composition while Insurance fundamentals provide data on investment level details, underwriting analysis, solvency, embedded value, and distribution channels.
Access: WRDS
TAQ
The Trade and Quote (TAQ) database contain intraday transactions data (trades and quotes) for all securities listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and American Stock Exchange (AMEX), as well as Nasdaq National Market System (NMS) and Small Cap issues.
Access:
Access to TAQ database
Thompson Reuters Dealscan
The database contains detailed historical information on the structure of corporate loans and credit lines for US and European firms. The database covers more than 240,000 syndicated loans.
Access: WRDS
Thomson Reuters Tick History
The database provides superior coverage of complete, timely and global microsecond tick data since 1996. It covers equities, fixed income, FX, futures, and options, in the Americas, Asia-Pacific, Europe, Middle East, and Asia. The stream provides trades and quotes messages, market depth, end of day prices from real-time exchanges, and intraday quotes.
Access: Only for Department of Finance faculty and PhD students. Contact Ida Listh for access.
We also have access to the Reuters D5 database which matches executable quotes and trades. Contact Paul Whelan for details.
Thomson One Banker
Access to company financials, stock prices, revenues, ownership and M&A data, stock exchange notifications, annual reports, news and events, "peer-analysis" etc.
Access: Thomson One Banker at CBS Library here. For Investext reports use the Research module. For M&A / Deals (SDC): Select Screening & Analysis followed by Deal & League Tables.
Trace
Trace captures and disseminates consolidated information on secondary market transactions in publicly traded TRACE-eligible securities (investment grade, high yield and convertible corporate debt) - representing all over-the-counter market activity in these bonds. Trace Historical Time and Sales data is available with 18-month lag and contain more information on time of execution, price, yield, and volume.
Access: WRDS
Worldscope
The database offers fundamental financial and non-financial annual/interim data on most major companies around the world. The subscription covers the full version of Worldscope.
Access: EIKON/DataStream
WRDS
Wharton Research Data Services (WRDS) is a data research platform used to access financial databases from several data providers. CBS subscribes to a number of WRDS databases including those listed on this page.
Access: http://wrds-web.wharton.upenn.edu/wrds/index.cfm (data access is password protected)
See how to register on the CBS library website here: https://www.cbs.dk/en/library/databases/wrds-wharton-research-data-services
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Education (Panel content)
Our contribution to programmes and courses
The Department of Finance offers highly qualified teaching within an extensive number of both part-time and full-time programmes at Copenhagen Business School.
Our faculty members function as both head of studies and study directors for several programmes under the Study Board for Finance, Economics & Mathematics.
This includes: MSc in Economics and Finance - Applied Economics and Finance, MSc in Economics and Finance - Advanced Economics and Finance, MSc in Finance and Investment, MSc in Finance and Strategic Management, MSc in Economics and Business Administration in Finance and Accounting and MSc in Business Administration and Mathematical Business Economics
Bachelor Programmes
Bachelor programmes to which the Department of Finance contributes
Master Programmes
Master programmes to which the Department of Finance contributes
Our Ph.D. programmes
The Department of Finance offers core courses in asset pricing, corporate finance and empirical finance/financial econometrics. In addition, intensive courses in more specialised financial or methodological topics are offered on an ongoing basis as part of the activities of the Nordic Finance Network (NFN), of which CBS is an active member.
PhD students take part in the Department’s PhD seminar series, where they present their research. They are also encouraged to present at lunch seminars and to submit their work to the annual Nordic PhD workshop, which is part of NFN’s activities. Presentations at workshops and conference submissions form an essential part of their research training.
All scholarships initially cover a three-year study period. Extended funding may be available for successful candidates who wish to pursue an academic career.
To be considered for a PhD position in Finance, applicants must have basic training at master’s level (equivalent to the 3 + 2 Bologna process). Applicants must have completed their master’s degree before commencing as PhD students at CBS, although applications from those close to completion are also welcome. In general, an MBA does not meet this requirement. Applicants must be fluent in English, and successful candidates will have an outstanding academic record from previously completed programmes. Priority will be given to applicants with a strong quantitative background and solid training in financial economics.
PhD students are expected to take an active part in the academic life of the department. Students under the Industrial PhD programme are welcome, but the department discourages applicants who wish to complete a PhD as a part-time project.
Being a Ph.D student
Hear more about being a PhD student at the Department of Finance.
Interested in doing a PhD with us?
Ph.D. programmes within Finance
PhD in Finance
The aim of our PhD program is to produce PhD candidates at a high international level. In addition to learning how to conduct research at an international level, students will acquire a broad theoretical and methodological insight into the discipline of finance.
PhD in Statistics and AI
The aim of our PhD program is to produce PhD candidates at a high international level. In addition to learning how to conduct research at an international level, students will acquire a broad theoretical and methodological insight into the discipline of statistics and AI.