In a market with one safe and one risky asset, an investor with a long horizon, constant investment opportunities and constant relative risk aversion trades with small proportional transaction costs. We derive explicit formulas for the optimal investment policy, its implied welfare, liquidity premium, and trading volume. At the first order, the liquidity premium equals the spread, times share turnover, times a universal constant. The results are robust to consumption and finite horizons. We exploit the equivalence of the transaction cost market to another frictionless market, with a shadow risky asset, in which investment opportunities are stochastic. The shadow price is also found explicitly
Standard literature concludes that transaction costs only have a second‐order effect on liquidity pr...
Liquidity, often defined as the ability of markets to absorb large transactions without much effect ...
This paper studies a portfolio choice problem such that the pricing rule may incorporate transaction...
In a market with one safe and one risky asset, an investor with a long horizon, constant investment ...
In a market with one safe and one risky asset, an investor with a long horizon, constant investment ...
We study how trading costs are reflected in equilibrium returns. To this end, we develop a tractable...
We study risk-sharing economies where heterogeneous agents trade subject to quadratic transaction co...
We solve the problem of optimal risk management for an investor holding an illiquid, alpha-generatin...
DoctorIn this thesis, I investigate the effect of market frictions towards the optimal policy of thr...
In this paper we analyze the impact of transactions costs on the rates of return on liquid and illiq...
We investigate the general structure of optimal investment and consumption with small proportional t...
We develop an asset pricing model with stochastic transaction costs and investors with heterogeneous...
For an investor with constant absolute risk aversion and a long horizon, who trades in a market with...
The present paper investigates the portfolio allocation decisions of an investor with infinite horiz...
The seminal work of Constantinides (1986) documents how, when the risky return is calibrated to the ...
Standard literature concludes that transaction costs only have a second‐order effect on liquidity pr...
Liquidity, often defined as the ability of markets to absorb large transactions without much effect ...
This paper studies a portfolio choice problem such that the pricing rule may incorporate transaction...
In a market with one safe and one risky asset, an investor with a long horizon, constant investment ...
In a market with one safe and one risky asset, an investor with a long horizon, constant investment ...
We study how trading costs are reflected in equilibrium returns. To this end, we develop a tractable...
We study risk-sharing economies where heterogeneous agents trade subject to quadratic transaction co...
We solve the problem of optimal risk management for an investor holding an illiquid, alpha-generatin...
DoctorIn this thesis, I investigate the effect of market frictions towards the optimal policy of thr...
In this paper we analyze the impact of transactions costs on the rates of return on liquid and illiq...
We investigate the general structure of optimal investment and consumption with small proportional t...
We develop an asset pricing model with stochastic transaction costs and investors with heterogeneous...
For an investor with constant absolute risk aversion and a long horizon, who trades in a market with...
The present paper investigates the portfolio allocation decisions of an investor with infinite horiz...
The seminal work of Constantinides (1986) documents how, when the risky return is calibrated to the ...
Standard literature concludes that transaction costs only have a second‐order effect on liquidity pr...
Liquidity, often defined as the ability of markets to absorb large transactions without much effect ...
This paper studies a portfolio choice problem such that the pricing rule may incorporate transaction...