Kristoph Kleiner
Business, Management and Accounting · Indiana University
Publications
13
Citations
170
Est. group size
—
Recurring co-author estimate
Active years
10
Publishing since 2015
Kristoph Kleiner studies corporate finance and how financial institutions and markets behave, with particular attention to bankruptcy proceedings, banking, and how professionals such as corporate bankers and judges make decisions. Recent work examines topics like whether judges are truly randomly assigned to corporate bankruptcy cases and whether bankers face consequences for taking risks. The research combines finance, law, and economics to understand institutional behavior.
Publication activity has been low and fairly steady over the past decade, averaging roughly one paper per year with a modest slowing in the most recent years.
Generated by claude-opus-4-8 from public bibliographic data · Jul 11, 2026
- Are Judges Randomly Assigned to Chapter 11 Bankruptcies? Not According to Hedge Funds
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2022
- Credit and Punishment: Are Corporate Bankers Disciplined for Risk-Taking?
Review of Financial Studies · 2020
- SSRN Electronic Journal×5
- Review of Financial Studies×2
- The Journal of Finance×1
- Journal of Financial Economics×1
- European Finance Review×1
This profile was generated automatically from public scholarly data (OpenAlex). Group size and activity levels are estimates derived from co-authorship patterns.
Last updated Jul 11, 2026.
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