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Loews Philadelphia, Regency Ballroom C1
Hosted By:
American Finance Association
Informed Trading
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 5, 2018 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM
- Chair: Vincent Glode, University of Pennsylvania
Dynamic Information Acquisition and Strategic Trading
Abstract
Consider a strategic trader who dynamically chooses when to acquire costly information about an asset's payoff, instead of being endowed with this information. Whether the market maker observes acquisition is critical. Without observability, we show that an equilibrium with smooth trading and a pure acquisition strategy cannot exist. We also rule out the existence of a natural class of mixed-strategy equilibria. With observability, however, there exists an equilibrium in which optimal acquisition follows a pure strategy and generally exhibits delay. Our results suggest that many strategic trading equilibria considered in the literature are difficult to reconcile with dynamic information acquisition.Speculation With Information Disclosure
Abstract
Sophisticated financial market participants frequently choose to disclose private information to the public --- a phenomenon inconsistent with most theories of speculative trading. In this paper, we propose and test a model to bridge this gap. We show that when a speculator cares about both the short-term value of her portfolio and her long-term profit, information disclosure is incentive compatible: Disclosure in the form of a mixture of fundamental information and the speculator’s position induces competitive dealership to revise prices in the direction of the speculator’s position. Using mutual fund disclosure through newspaper articles, we find that when fund managers have stronger estimated short-term incentives, the frequency of strategic disclosures about stocks in their portfolios increases and those stocks’ liquidity improves, consistent with our model.Discussant(s)
Yasser Boualam
,
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
Itay Goldstein
,
University of Pennsylvania
Diego Garcia
,
University of Colorado-Boulder
JEL Classifications
- G1 - General Financial Markets