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Competitive Information in the Stock Market: An Empirical Study of Earnings, Dividends and Analysts' Forecasts: Discussion
S. Sunder, Competitive Information in the Stock Market: An Empirical Study of Earnings, Dividends and Analysts' Forecasts: Discussion, The Journal of Finance, Vol. 31, No. 2, Papers and Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the American Finance Association Dallas, Texas December 28-30, 1975 (May, 1976), pp. 680-684
What Makes Markets Allocationally Efficient?
What determines the allocative efficiency of markets? Why are double auctions, even with untrained human traders, allocationally efficient? We provide a simple explanation for these complex phenomena by showing how externally observable rules that define a market cause high allocative efficiency when individuals remain within the confines of these rules. We also show how the oft-ignored shape of extramarginal demand and supply affects efficiency by influencing the inverse relationship between the magnitude of efficiency loss and its probability.