The overreaching methodology of my Ph.D. thesis is to substitute noise traders with rational traders. I do so by considering liquidity asymmetry between informed trader and uninformed traders. Liquidity asymmetry creates a motive for trade. Under this new setup, I study the impact of asset trade on the real economy, represented by a firm with an investment opportunity, in chapter 1 ("Efficient Asset Trade - A Model with Asymmetric Information and Asymmetric Liquidity Needs"). I find conditions for which asset trade leads to inefficient investment. Chapter 2 ("(In)Efficient Asset Trade and a Rationale for a Tobin Tax") characterizes a tax which can restore efficient investment. In chapter 3, I show that finitely repeated trade, as in Kyle (1...
The purpose of the financial system is to provide a service to its end-users, savers and investors. ...
Financial intermediaries play an important role in the pricing of financial assets. For example, in...
We propose a model in which investors cannot costlessly process information from asset prices. At th...
The overreaching methodology of my Ph.D. thesis is to substitute noise traders with rational traders...
This dissertation consists of three essays. The essay “On the Optimal Allocation of New Security Lis...
We study the impact of a financial transaction tax (FTT) in a model that combines asset trading and ...
This article investigates the impacts of asymmetric information within a Lucas (1978) asset pricing ...
This thesis presents three models of asset pricing involving non-competitive behavior and asymmetric...
The thesis includes two essays on asset pricing. In the first essay, "Asset Pricing in a Monetary Ec...
In the first chapter, I develop and estimate a novel dynamic model of the secondary market trading o...
The aim of the thesis is to investigate strategic trading under asymmetric information in particular...
This dissertation studies the effects of asymmetric information and learning on asset prices and inv...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2000.Includes bib...
This paper explores the role of news in financial markets with asymmetrically-informed traders. We s...
This dissertation departures from the usual price taking and non-exclusive asset pooling assumptions...
The purpose of the financial system is to provide a service to its end-users, savers and investors. ...
Financial intermediaries play an important role in the pricing of financial assets. For example, in...
We propose a model in which investors cannot costlessly process information from asset prices. At th...
The overreaching methodology of my Ph.D. thesis is to substitute noise traders with rational traders...
This dissertation consists of three essays. The essay “On the Optimal Allocation of New Security Lis...
We study the impact of a financial transaction tax (FTT) in a model that combines asset trading and ...
This article investigates the impacts of asymmetric information within a Lucas (1978) asset pricing ...
This thesis presents three models of asset pricing involving non-competitive behavior and asymmetric...
The thesis includes two essays on asset pricing. In the first essay, "Asset Pricing in a Monetary Ec...
In the first chapter, I develop and estimate a novel dynamic model of the secondary market trading o...
The aim of the thesis is to investigate strategic trading under asymmetric information in particular...
This dissertation studies the effects of asymmetric information and learning on asset prices and inv...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2000.Includes bib...
This paper explores the role of news in financial markets with asymmetrically-informed traders. We s...
This dissertation departures from the usual price taking and non-exclusive asset pooling assumptions...
The purpose of the financial system is to provide a service to its end-users, savers and investors. ...
Financial intermediaries play an important role in the pricing of financial assets. For example, in...
We propose a model in which investors cannot costlessly process information from asset prices. At th...