Antonio Coppola

Assistant Professor of Finance
Center Fellow, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research
Academic Area:
Antonio Coppola

Research Interests

  • Finance
  • International Macroeconomics
  • Applied AI

Academic Degrees

  • PhD in Economics, Harvard University, 2022
  • AB Summa Cum Laude in Applied Mathematics, 2016

Academic Appointments

  • Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, 2022–23

Awards and Honors

  • European Systemic Risk Board’s Ieke van den Burg Prize, 2022
  • AQR Top Finance Graduate Award, 2022
  • BlackRock Applied Research Award, Finalist, 2021

Service to the Profession

    • Associate Editor, Journal of the European Economic Association

    Journal Articles

    Antonio Coppola, Arvind Krishnamurthy, Chenzi Xu
    Journal of Finance
    2026 Vol. Forthcoming
    Antonio Coppola, Arvind Krishnamurthy, Chenzi Xu
    American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings
    May 2025 Vol. 115 Pages 599–604
    Antonio Coppola
    The Review of Financial Studies
    March 2025 Vol. 38 Issue 8 Pages 2275–325
    Antonio Coppola
    The Review of Financial Studies
    March 2025 Vol. 38 Issue 8 Pages 2275–325
    Christopher Clayton, Antonio Coppola, Amanda Dos Santos, Matteo Maggiori, Jesse Schreger
    AEA Papers and Proceedings
    May 2023 Vol. 113 Pages 114–119
    Antonio Coppola, Matteo Maggiori, Brent Neiman, Jesse Schreger August 2021 Vol. 136 Issue 3 Pages 1499–1556

    Working Papers

    Christopher Clayton, Antonio Coppola 2026
    Christopher Clayton, Antonio Coppola, Matteo Maggiori, Jesse Schreger 2025
    Roland Beck, Antonio Coppola, Angus Lewis, Matteo Maggiori, Martin Schmitz, Jesse Schreger 2025

    Insights by Stanford Business

    March 19, 2026
    How regulators could use the predictive power of AI without injecting new risks into the financial system
    February 16, 2023
    Countries that want to “dedollarize” must find a currency that matches the greenback’s extraordinary liquidity.
    May 04, 2020
    Corporations raise vast sums of money through subsidiaries in tax havens. A new study unravels big surprises in global imbalances.