We analyze the implications of increases in the selection of, and information about, derivative financial products in a model in which investors neglect informational differences between themselves and issuers. We assume that investors receive information that is noisy and inferior to issuers' information, and that issuers can select the set of underlying assets when designing a security. In contrast to the received wisdom that diversification is helpful, we show that when custom-designed diversification across a large number of underlying assets is possible, then expected utility approaches negative infinity. Even beyond this limiting case, any expansion in choice induced by either an increase in the maximum number of assets underlying a s...
We analyze the incentives for information disclosure in financial markets. We show that borrowers ma...
Financial markets and financial intermediation are essential to well-functioning economy. They perfo...
In this paper, we use a series of simple examples to illustrate how wealth-driven selection works in...
We analyze the implications of increases in the selection of, and information about, derivative fina...
We analyze the welfare properties of derivative securities that profit-maximizing issuers offer to i...
We solve the problem of an investor who chooses which assets' payoff to acquire information about be...
If an investor wants to form a portfolio of risky assets and can exert effort to collect information...
We develop a rational model of investors who choose which asset payo®s to acquire informa- tion abou...
We develop a rational model of investors who choose which asset payoffs to acquire information abou...
This article studies a security design problem featuring flexible information acquisition. To raise ...
Regulations that require asset issuers to disclose payoff-relevant information to potential buyers so...
This paper studies the interplay between the investor’s incentives to delegate her asset allocation ...
We investigate the effects of diverse information on the price of risky assets in rational expectati...
This article analyses costly information acquisition in asset markets with Knightian uncertainty abo...
We investigate the effects of diverse information on the price of risky assets in rational expectati...
We analyze the incentives for information disclosure in financial markets. We show that borrowers ma...
Financial markets and financial intermediation are essential to well-functioning economy. They perfo...
In this paper, we use a series of simple examples to illustrate how wealth-driven selection works in...
We analyze the implications of increases in the selection of, and information about, derivative fina...
We analyze the welfare properties of derivative securities that profit-maximizing issuers offer to i...
We solve the problem of an investor who chooses which assets' payoff to acquire information about be...
If an investor wants to form a portfolio of risky assets and can exert effort to collect information...
We develop a rational model of investors who choose which asset payo®s to acquire informa- tion abou...
We develop a rational model of investors who choose which asset payoffs to acquire information abou...
This article studies a security design problem featuring flexible information acquisition. To raise ...
Regulations that require asset issuers to disclose payoff-relevant information to potential buyers so...
This paper studies the interplay between the investor’s incentives to delegate her asset allocation ...
We investigate the effects of diverse information on the price of risky assets in rational expectati...
This article analyses costly information acquisition in asset markets with Knightian uncertainty abo...
We investigate the effects of diverse information on the price of risky assets in rational expectati...
We analyze the incentives for information disclosure in financial markets. We show that borrowers ma...
Financial markets and financial intermediation are essential to well-functioning economy. They perfo...
In this paper, we use a series of simple examples to illustrate how wealth-driven selection works in...