Trading Costs and Informational Efficiency
Abstract
We study the effect of trading costs on information aggregation and acquisition in financial markets. For a given precision of investors' private information, an irrelevance result emerges when investors are ex-ante identical:... [ view full abstract ]
We study the effect of trading costs on information aggregation and acquisition in financial markets. For a given precision of investors' private information, an irrelevance result emerges when investors are ex-ante identical: price informativeness is independent of the level of trading costs. This result holds for quadratic, linear, and fixed trading costs in competitive and strategic environments. When investors are ex-ante heterogeneous, trading costs reduce (increase) price informativeness if and only if investors who disproportionately trade on information are more (less) elastic than investors who mostly trade on hedging. Through a reduction in information acquisition, trading costs reduce price informativeness.
Authors
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Eduardo Davila
(New York University)
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Cecilia Parlatore
(New York University)
Topic Areas
D. Microeconomics: D8. Information, Knowledge, and Uncertainty , G. Financial Economics: G1. General Financial Markets
Session
CS3-07 » Finance 3 (08:00 - Friday, 10th November, Miro)
Paper
Davila_Parlatore_Trading_Costs.pdf
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