We study a discriminatory limit-order book in which market makers compete in nonlinear tariffs to serve a privately informed insider. Our model allows for general nonparametric specifications of preferences and arbitrary discrete distributions for the insider's private information. Adverse selection severely restricts equilibrium outcomes: in any pure-strategy equilibrium with convex tariffs, pricing must be linear and at most one type can trade, leading to an extreme form of market breakdown. As a result, such equilibria only exist under exceptional circumstances that we fully characterize. These results are strikingly different from those of existing analyses that postulate a continuum of types. The two approaches can be reconciled when w...
This paper characterizes the equilibrium sets of common agency games with direct externalities betwe...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
Abstract: The paper analyzes a monopolistic insurer’s pricing strategies when poten-tial customers d...
We study a discriminatory limit-order book in which market makers compete in nonlinear tariffs to se...
Many financial markets rely on a discriminatory limit-order book to balance supply and demand. We st...
This paper generalizes the study of nonlinear tariffs, i.e.. those depending nonlinearly on the quan...
This article surveys recent attempts at characterizing competitive allocations under adverse selecti...
The major focus of the nonlinear pricing literature has been to demonstrate how welfare in a monopol...
This article studies a market game under uncertainty in which agents may submit multiple limit and m...
We characterize and prove the existence of Nash equilibrium in a limit order market with a finite nu...
We make three contributions to the theory of contracting under asymmetric information. First, we est...
This paper develops a model of nonlinear pricing with competition. The novel element is that each co...
We show that for a large class of competitive nonlinear pricing games with adverse selection, the pr...
A market with free entry monopolistic competition is studied. Nonlinear pricing is shown to be the B...
The standard dominant firm (DF)-competitive fringe model, in which all firms sell the good through l...
This paper characterizes the equilibrium sets of common agency games with direct externalities betwe...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
Abstract: The paper analyzes a monopolistic insurer’s pricing strategies when poten-tial customers d...
We study a discriminatory limit-order book in which market makers compete in nonlinear tariffs to se...
Many financial markets rely on a discriminatory limit-order book to balance supply and demand. We st...
This paper generalizes the study of nonlinear tariffs, i.e.. those depending nonlinearly on the quan...
This article surveys recent attempts at characterizing competitive allocations under adverse selecti...
The major focus of the nonlinear pricing literature has been to demonstrate how welfare in a monopol...
This article studies a market game under uncertainty in which agents may submit multiple limit and m...
We characterize and prove the existence of Nash equilibrium in a limit order market with a finite nu...
We make three contributions to the theory of contracting under asymmetric information. First, we est...
This paper develops a model of nonlinear pricing with competition. The novel element is that each co...
We show that for a large class of competitive nonlinear pricing games with adverse selection, the pr...
A market with free entry monopolistic competition is studied. Nonlinear pricing is shown to be the B...
The standard dominant firm (DF)-competitive fringe model, in which all firms sell the good through l...
This paper characterizes the equilibrium sets of common agency games with direct externalities betwe...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
Abstract: The paper analyzes a monopolistic insurer’s pricing strategies when poten-tial customers d...