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A Theory and Test of Credit Rationing: Some Further Results

American Economic Review 1981
The arbitrage argument extends to the case of many risk assets: the equilibrium leverage ratio will vary with the riskiness of the asset backing up the loan and variations in leverage will then substitute for variations in the interest rate. However, it can readily be shown along the lines of [Vernon L.] Smith that competition in leverage terms would be insufficient to correct the inefficient allocation of claims produced by the market when the interest rate is fixed.4

Transaction Costs, Order Placement Strategy, and Existence of the Bid-Ask Spread

Journal of Political Economy 1981 89(2), 287-305
By considering investor order placement strategy, this paper demonstrates that transaction costs cause bid-ask spreads to be an equilibrium property of asset markets. With transaction costs, the probability of a limit order executing does not go to unity as the order is placed infinitesimally close to a counterpart market quote; thus, with certainty of execution at the counterpart market quote, a "gravitational pull" is generated that keeps counterpart quotes from being placed infinitesimally close to each other. An equilibrium spread is defined and its size linked to market thinness; implications are noted for the design of a trading system.

Transaction Costs, Order Placement Strategy, and Existence of the Bid-Ask Spread

Journal of Political Economy 1981 89(2), 287-305
By considering investor order placement strategy, this paper demonstrates that transaction costs cause bid-ask spreads to be an equilibrium property of asset markets. With transaction costs, the probability of a limit order executing does not go to unity as the order is placed infinitesimally close to a counterpart market quote; thus, with certainty of execution at the counterpart market quote, a "gravitational pull" is generated that keeps counterpart quotes from being placed infinitesimally close to each other. An equilibrium spread is defined and its size linked to market thinness; implications are noted for the design of a trading system.