We model a financial market where some traders of a risky asset do not fully appreciate what prices convey about others' private information. Markets comprising solely such “cursed” traders generate more trade than those comprising solely rationals. Because rationals arbitrage away distortions caused by cursed traders, mixed markets can generate even more trade. Per-trader volume in cursed markets increases with market size; volume may instead disappear when traders infer others' information from prices, even when they dismiss it as noisier than their own. Making private information public raises rational and “dismissive” volume, but reduces cursed volume given moderate noninformational trading motives
The literature on financial markets is vast and it is probably safe to say that all tools in the eco...
This paper examines the process by which private information is impounded in security prices in a ma...
In this thesis I develop two theoretical models to analyze how investors can infer private informati...
We model a financial market where some traders of a risky asset do not fully appreciate what prices ...
We model a financial market where some traders of a risky asset do not fully appreciate what prices ...
textThis thesis examines the behavior of rational agents in market settings of incomplete informati...
textThis thesis examines the behavior of rational agents in market settings of incomplete informati...
In this paper, I examine the impact of “correlation neglect” in a financial market, where naive trad...
In this paper, we study experimentally the information aggregation process in a market as a function...
When private information is observed by ambiguity averse investors, asset prices may be informationa...
Allowing for a richer information structure than usual, we show that rational traders’ calculation w...
International audienceWe set up a rational expectations model in which investors trade a risky asset...
This paper studies the effects on the asset price of the introduction of a public signal in the pres...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2018. Major: Economics. Advisors: Jan Werner, David...
Chapter 1 analyzes a model of multiple overconfident traders submitting market orders where traders’...
The literature on financial markets is vast and it is probably safe to say that all tools in the eco...
This paper examines the process by which private information is impounded in security prices in a ma...
In this thesis I develop two theoretical models to analyze how investors can infer private informati...
We model a financial market where some traders of a risky asset do not fully appreciate what prices ...
We model a financial market where some traders of a risky asset do not fully appreciate what prices ...
textThis thesis examines the behavior of rational agents in market settings of incomplete informati...
textThis thesis examines the behavior of rational agents in market settings of incomplete informati...
In this paper, I examine the impact of “correlation neglect” in a financial market, where naive trad...
In this paper, we study experimentally the information aggregation process in a market as a function...
When private information is observed by ambiguity averse investors, asset prices may be informationa...
Allowing for a richer information structure than usual, we show that rational traders’ calculation w...
International audienceWe set up a rational expectations model in which investors trade a risky asset...
This paper studies the effects on the asset price of the introduction of a public signal in the pres...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2018. Major: Economics. Advisors: Jan Werner, David...
Chapter 1 analyzes a model of multiple overconfident traders submitting market orders where traders’...
The literature on financial markets is vast and it is probably safe to say that all tools in the eco...
This paper examines the process by which private information is impounded in security prices in a ma...
In this thesis I develop two theoretical models to analyze how investors can infer private informati...