The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically restrict strategies, often assuming price or match commitments. We lift such restrictions to study equilibrium when search can be directed over time, without constraints and at no cost. In equilibrium, trade frictions arise endogenously, and price commitments, if they do exist, are self-enforcing. In contrast to the typical model, there exists a continuum of equilibria that exhibit trade frictions. These equilibria support any price above the static price, including monopoly pricing in arbitrarily large markets. Dispersion in posted prices can naturally arise as temporary or permanent phenomenon despite the absence of preexisting heterogenei...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in Peters (1984), where heterogeneous market participants ...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117–1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically restrict strate...
The directed search model (Peters, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically re-strict strat...
Search Theory has been extensively and successfully applied to explain the persistence of price disp...
When the trading process is characterized by search frictions, traders may be rationed so markets ne...
Abstract. This paper considers a frictional market where buyers and sellers, with unit demand and su...
When the trading process is characterized by search frictions, traders may be rationed so markets ne...
We consider the canonical directed search framework in which sellers play pure strategies and assume...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in Peters (1984), where heterogeneous market participants ...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117–1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The directed search model (Peters, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically restrict strate...
The directed search model (Peters, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically re-strict strat...
Search Theory has been extensively and successfully applied to explain the persistence of price disp...
When the trading process is characterized by search frictions, traders may be rationed so markets ne...
Abstract. This paper considers a frictional market where buyers and sellers, with unit demand and su...
When the trading process is characterized by search frictions, traders may be rationed so markets ne...
We consider the canonical directed search framework in which sellers play pure strategies and assume...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in [7], where a finite number of heterogeneous capacity-co...
We study a decentralized trading model as in Peters (1984), where heterogeneous market participants ...