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Market Structures and Liquidity: A Transactions Data Study of Exchange Listings

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(3), 300-326
This paper examines the change in trading costs for firms that choose to move from a dealer market to a specialist system. Using transactions data, our empirical results reveal structurally induced average trading cost reductions of 4.7 (5.2) cents per share for firms that moved from the NASDAQ/NMS to the NYSE (AMEX) in 1990. For NYSE listed stocks, the trading cost reductions are equally divided between quote improvements and the routing of trades to the NYSE. Trading cost improvements vary inversely with trade sizes and positively with dollar spreads. Finally, the greatest liquidity benefits from listing accrue to the less liquid stocks. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: D40, G12, G20.

Electronic Screen Trading and the Transmission of Information: An Empirical Examination

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(2), 166-187
We examine the lead–lag relation between intraday spot and futures prices for a stock index where the component stocks are floor traded while the futures contract is screen traded. We find that futures prices lead spot prices by nearly 20 min. This is much longer than in markets where both the index and index futures are floor traded. We show that this lead–lag relation is unlikely to be an artifact of differences in liquidity between the spot and futures markets. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that screen trading accelerates the price discovery process. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: F33, G15, G20, O31.

Public versus Private Borrowing: A Theory with Implications for Bankruptcy Reform

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(4), 327-354 open access
A model is presented in which firms optimally finance investment with both public and private debt. The two instruments are perfect substitutes, except that private debt can easily be renegotiated in insolvency states while public debt cannot. The option to renegotiate is beneficial ex post, as it allows the firm to avoid inefficient liquidation, but ex ante it may worsen asset substitution. The welfare effects of alternative bankruptcy regimes are then compared, taking into account that firms modify their financing decision in response to the regime change. Some suggestions for reforming Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code are presented. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: G32, G33, K2.

Borrower Mobility, Adverse Selection, and Mortgage Points

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(4), 416-441
This paper analyzes a simple mobility-based model of mortgage lending and uses the results to illuminate the issue of mortgage points. The model predicts the points/interest-rate trade-off observed in the market, and it also predicts that mobile borrowers choose low-points/high-rate contracts from the available menu, in conformance with conventional wisdom. These outcomes are shown to be a result of adverse selection, which arises because of the lender′s inability to distinguish the mobility characteristics of borrowers. Empirical evidence is also presented showing the presence of a points/interest-rate trade-off in the market. In addition, relying on a proxy variable, the results establish that borrowers choose contracts from this menu according to mobility. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: G21.

Financing Losers in Competitive Markets

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(2), 139-165 open access
Projects with negative expected value cannot obtain financing in competitive capital markets if all potential investors are risk neutral and have identical beliefs about the distribution of the project′s net revenue. We present a series of examples with heterogeneous beliefs in which it is possible for a project to obtain financing even though all investors in the project believe, conditional on the project being undertaken, that the project has negative expected value. An important feature of the examples is that the differences in beliefs are due only to differences in information, and are not simply arbitrary unexplained differences in opinions. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers:D8, G1.

Money and Credit with Asymmetric Information

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(3), 213-244
This paper studies the use of cash and credit for making transactions when there is asymmetric information in credit markets. For relatively low inflation rates, equilibria are of the pooling variety and low-credit-risk consumers signal their riskiness to lenders only indirectly by establishing a good track record in credit markets. For higher inflation rates there may exist a separating equilibrium in which low-credit-risk consumers directly signal their type to lenders by specializing in cash early in life and specializing in credit later in life. The greater the degree of adverse selection in credit markets, the wider the range of inflation rates for which a separating equilibrium exists. Credit usage is increasing in the inflation rate, but greater adverse selection may increase or decrease credit usage depending on the parameterization. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Number: E44.

The Dynamics of Competitive Insurance Markets

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(4), 379-415
According to conventional theory, insurance premiums should be informationally efficient predictors of the present value of policy claims and expenses. This paper develops an alternative theory of insurance market dynamics based on two assumptions. First, insured risks are dependent. Under this assumption, insurers′ net worth determines the market capacity since it is necessary to back the contractual promises to pay claims. Second, in raising net worth, external equity is more costly than internal equity. The theory explains the variation in premiums and insurance contracts over the "insurance cycle" and is supported by tests on postwar data. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: G1, G22.

On the Equivalence of Noise Trader and Hedger Models in Market Microstructure

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(2), 204-212
It is shown that the models of Spiegel and Subrahmanyam (1992, Rev. Finan. Stud.5(2), 307–329) and Kyle (1985, Econometrica53, 1315–1335) are equivalent in the following sense: the equilibrium values of market depth, the expected total trading volume and the expected price level are the same in the two models. Equivalence exists whenever the uniformed traders hedge all of their endowments of risky shares. This occurs under two sets of parameter configurations. In both cases, the linear equilibrium in the hedger model always exists. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers; G12, G14, D82.

Asymmetric Information: A Rationale for Corporate Speculation

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1994 3(2), 188-203
This paper demonstrates how managers with private information about firms′ exposure to risk may, in the best interest of shareholders, engage in speculation instead of hedging as the conventional wisdom tells us. The reason is that when profits serve as a signal of firms′ values, speculative trades can be used to distort profits and hence manipulate stock prices to the shareholders′ advantage. A consequence of such corporate speculation is that stock prices become less informative about firms′ true worth. Journal of Economic Literature Classification Numbers: D82, G14, G32.