Essays in Financial Economics

Essays in Financial Economics

Author: Rita Biswas

Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing

Published: 2019-10-24

Total Pages: 168

ISBN-13: 1789733898

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This volume, dedicated to John W. Kensinger, explores a variety of topics in financial economics, including firm growth, investment risks, and the profitability of the banking industry. With its global perspective, Essays in Financial Economics is a valuable addition to the bookshelf of any researcher in finance.


Selected Essays on Market Microstructure

Selected Essays on Market Microstructure

Author: Christian Voigt

Publisher: GRIN Verlag

Published: 2008-09-10

Total Pages: 159

ISBN-13: 3640161157

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Doctoral Thesis / Dissertation from the year 2008 in the subject Business economics - Economic Policy, grade: summa cum laude, European Business School - International University Schloß Reichartshausen Oestrich-Winkel, language: English, abstract: The aim of this thesis is to contribute to the existing empirical literature by investigating the strategic behavior of informed and uninformed traders under the light of recent developments. We observe their actual current behavior at financial markets and try to assess whether existing theoretical arguments and assumptions are still valid in the world today, or the newly available rich data samples provide new answers to old questions that researchers have not been able to answer before.


Essays on Information Acquisition and Asset Pricing

Essays on Information Acquisition and Asset Pricing

Author: Paul Marmora

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 88

ISBN-13:

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In this dissertation, I explore different mechanisms by which information is generated in financial markets, and whether these mechanisms can account for empirical anomalies that models without information choice have difficulty explaining. In the first chapter, I survey the theoretical literature on perfectly competitive asset markets, with a particular focus on rational expectations models with endogenous information acquisition. In the second chapter, ``The Distribution of Information, the Market for Financial News, and the Cost of Capital", I present a rational expectations model with a competitive market for financial news that provides an explanation for why stocks with a higher degree of information asymmetry tend to earn higher expected returns. I demonstrate that when a small fraction of investors hold a large fraction of a firm's private information, few investors demand a copy of firm-specific news in equilibrium. As a result, each investor must incur a larger share of the fixed cost of news production to obtain a copy, which deters investors from learning more about the firm and therefore raises their required risk premium. This result hinges crucially on the ability of investors to share in the fixed cost of news production, which suggests that the financial news media plays an important role in determining how the cost of capital varies with the inequality of information across investors. In the third chapter, ``Learning About Noise" (with Oleg Rytchkov), we study theoretical implications of endogenous acquisition of non-fundamental information in financial markets. We develop a rational expectations model with heterogeneous information and multidimensional costly learning and demonstrate that i) investors specialize in information acquisition, that is, those who are endowed with high (low) quality information about fundamentals learn only about fundamentals (noise), ii) learning about fundamentals increases the asymmetry of information, whereas learning about noise decreases it, and iii) the opportunity to learn about noise unambiguously increases price informativeness.


Three Essays on the Role of Information Networks in Financial Markets

Three Essays on the Role of Information Networks in Financial Markets

Author: Swasti Gupta-Mukherjee

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Based on previous evidence that there are information heterogeneities in capital markets, three essays including empirical frameworks for examining the information processes that impact portfolio investments and corporate investments was proposed. The first essay considers information channels among mutual fund managers (fund-fund networks), and between holding companies and fund managers (fund-company networks). Results show that (1) fund-fund (fund-company) information networks help in generating positive risk-adjusted returns from holdings in absence of fund-company (fund-fund) networks; (2) fund-company networks create information advantage only when the networks are relatively exclusive. Superior networks seem to pick stocks which outperform beyond the quarter. The second essay examines mutual fund managers' tendency to deviate from the strategies of their peers. Results indicate a significantly negative relationship between the managers' deviating tendency and fund performance, suggesting that the average fund manager is more likely to make erroneous decisions when they deviate from their peers. The third essay investigates the determinants of target choices in corporate acquisitions. Results reveal the influence of various factors, including information asymmetries, which may drive this behavior, including economic opportunities, anti-takeover regimes, competitive responses to other managers, and acquirers' size and book-to-market ratios.


Asymmetric Information and Financial Markets

Asymmetric Information and Financial Markets

Author: G. Manjunatha

Publisher: Ary Publisher

Published: 2023-06-10

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9782391241750

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This econometric analysis focuses on the relationship between asymmetric information and financial markets. The study aims to examine how the presence of asymmetric information affects market dynamics and outcomes. By utilizing advanced statistical techniques and econometric modeling, the research investigates the impact of information asymmetry on various financial market variables. The study analyzes the role of information asymmetry in influencing market efficiency, price formation, trading volume, and investor behavior. It explores how differences in information between market participants lead to market inefficiencies, such as mispricing and suboptimal trading strategies. Additionally, the research investigates the implications of asymmetric information for market liquidity, volatility, and the overall stability of financial markets. Through the econometric analysis, the study provides empirical evidence and insights into the effects of asymmetric information on financial markets. It aims to contribute to the existing literature by shedding light on the mechanisms through which information asymmetry influences market dynamics and outcomes. The findings have practical implications for investors, financial institutions, and policymakers, helping to enhance market transparency, investor protection, and the efficiency of financial markets. Overall, this econometric analysis delves into the relationship between asymmetric information and financial markets. By employing rigorous statistical techniques, it aims to understand the impact of information asymmetry on market variables, providing valuable insights for market participants and stakeholders. The research ultimately seeks to contribute to the understanding of market dynamics and inform strategies to mitigate the adverse effects of information asymmetry in financial markets.


The Role of Informational Asymmetries in Financial Markets and the Real Economy

The Role of Informational Asymmetries in Financial Markets and the Real Economy

Author: Victoria Magdalena Vanasco

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 110

ISBN-13:

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The stability of national and, increasingly more often, the global economy relies on well-functioning financial markets. Households' consumption and saving decisions, firms' investment choices, and governments' financing strategies critically depend on the stability of financial markets. These markets, however, are composed of individuals and institutions that may have different objectives, information sets, and beliefs, making them a very complex object that we do not fully comprehend. Motivated by this, my dissertation focuses on understanding how informational asymmetries and belief heterogeneity impact financial markets, and therefore, the macro economy. More specifically, this dissertation explores the sources of informational asymmetries among market participants. How do different financial market structures provide incentives for private information acquisition? Is information acquisition desirable? What types of policies can be implemented to increase liquidity and "discipline" in financial markets? Could business cycles be related to information or belief cycles? I tackle these questions from three separate angles. First, I study how alternative market designs bring forth different levels of private information generation, "market discipline," and liquidity. Second, I investigate how information sets of key market participants are determined. Finally, I focus on how information and belief fluctuations may affect key macroeconomic variables and economic fluctuations. In Chapter 1, ``Information Acquisition vs. Liquidity in Financial Markets," I propose a parsimonious framework to study markets for asset-backed securities (ABS). These markets play an important role in providing lending capacity to the banking industry by allowing banks to sell the cashflows of their loans and thus recycle capital and reduce the riskiness of their portfolios. In the financial crash of 2008, however, in which certain ABS played a substantial role, we witnessed a collapse in the issuance of all ABS classes. Given the importance of these markets for the real economy, policy makers in the US and Europe have geared their efforts towards reviving them. A good framework to think about these markets is imperative when thinking about financial regulation. The contribution of this chapter is to propose a model that captures the two main problems that have been shown to be present in the practice of securitization. First, the increase in securitization has led to a decline in lending standards, suggesting that liquid markets for ABS reduce incentives to issue good quality loans. Second, securitizers have used private information about loan quality when choosing which loans to securitize, indicating that a problem of asymmetric information is present in ABS markets. A natural question then arises: how should ABS be designed to provide incentives to issue good quality loans and, at the same time, to preserve liquidity and trade in these markets? To address this question, I propose a framework to study ABS where both incentives and liquidity issues are considered and linked through a loan issuer's information acquisition decision. Loan issuers acquire private information about potential borrowers, use this information to screen loans, and later design and sell securities backed by these loans when in need of funds. While information is beneficial ex-ante when used to screen loans, it becomes detrimental ex-post because it introduces a problem of adverse selection that hinders trade in ABS markets. The model matches key features of these markets, such as the issuance of senior and junior tranches, and it predicts that when gains from trade in ABS markets are `sufficiently' large, information acquisition and loan screening are inefficiently low. There are two channels that drive this inefficiency. First, when gains from trade are large, a loan issuer is tempted ex-post to sell a large portion of its cashflows and thus does not internalize that lower retention implements less information acquisition. Second, the presence of adverse selection in secondary markets creates informational rents for issuers holding low quality loans, reducing the value of loan screening. This suggests that incentives for loan screening not only depend on the portion of loans retained by issuers, but also on how the market prices the issued tranches. Turning to financial regulation, I characterize the optimal mechanism and show that it can be implemented with a simple tax scheme. The obtained results, therefore, contribute to the recent debate on how to regulate markets for ABS. In Chapter 2, I present joint work with Matthew Botsch, ``Learning by Lending, Do Banks Learn?" where we investigate how banks form their information sets about the quality of their borrowers. There is a vast empirical and theoretical literature that points to the importance of borrower-lender relationships for firms' access to credit. In this chapter, we investigate one particular mechanism through which long-term relationships might improve access to credit. We hypothesize that while lending to a firm, a bank receives signals that allow it to learn and better understand the firm's fundamentals; and that this learning is private; that is, it is information that is not fully reflected in publicly-observable variables. We test this hypothesis using a dataset for 7,618 syndicated loans made between 1987 and 2003. We construct a variable that proxies for firm quality and is unobservable by the bank, so it cannot be priced when the firm enters our sample. We show that the loading on this factor in the pricing equation increases with relationship time, hinting that banks are able to learn about firm quality when they are in an established relationship with the firm. Our finding is robust to controlling for market-wide learning about firm fundamentals. This suggests that a significant portion of bank learning is private and is not shared by all market participants. The results obtained in this study underpin one of the main assumptions of the model presented in Chapter 1: that banks have a special ability to privately acquire valuable information about potential borrowers. While the model is static, the data suggests that the process of lending and of information acquisition is a dynamic one. Consistent with this, the last chapter of this dissertation studies the macroeconomic implications of dynamic learning by financial intermediaries. Chapter 3 presents joint work with Vladimir Asriyan titled ``Informed Intermediation over the Cycle." In this paper, we construct a dynamic model of financial intermediation in which changes in the information held by financial intermediaries generate asymmetric credit cycles as the one observed in the data. We model financial intermediaries as ''expert'' agents who have a unique ability to acquire information about firm fundamentals. While the level of ''expertise'' in the economy grows in tandem with information that the ''experts'' possess, the gains from intermediation are hindered by informational asymmetries. We find the optimal financial contracts and show that the economy inherits not only the dynamic nature of information flow, but also the interaction of information with the contractual setting. We introduce a cyclical component to information by supposing that the fundamentals about which experts acquire information are stochastic. While persistence of fundamentals is essential for information to be valuable, their randomness acts as an opposing force and diminishes the value of expert learning. Our setting then features economic fluctuations due to waves of ``confidence'' in the intermediaries' ability to allocate funds profitably.