Search and Find

Book Title

Author/Publisher

Table of Contents

Show eBooks for my device only:

 

Asset Pricing under Asymmetric Information:Bubbles, Crashes, Technical Analysis, and Herding

Asset Pricing under Asymmetric Information:Bubbles, Crashes, Technical Analysis, and Herding

of: Unknown

OUP Oxford, 2001

ISBN: 9780191606922

Format: ePUB

Copy protection: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX geeignet für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's Apple iPod touch, iPhone und Android Smartphones

Price: 42,89 EUR



More of the content

Asset Pricing under Asymmetric Information:Bubbles, Crashes, Technical Analysis, and Herding


 

Asset prices are driven by public news and information that is often dispersed among many market participants. These agents try to infer each other's information by analyzing price processes. In the past two decades, theoretical research in financial economics has significantly advanced our understanding of the informational aspects of price processes. This book provides a detailed and up-to-date survey of this important body of literature.The book begins by demonstrating how to model asymmetric information and higher-order knowledge. It then contrasts competitive and strategic equilibrium concepts under asymmetric information. It also illustrates the dependence of information efficiency and allocative efficiency on the security structure and the linkage between both efficiency concepts. No-Trade theorems and market breakdowns due to asymmetric information are then explained, and the existence of bubbles under symmetric andasymmetric information is investigated.The remainder of the survey is devoted to contrasting different market microstructure models that demonstrate how asymmetric information affects asset prices and traders' information , which provide a theoretical explanation for technical analysis and illustrate why some investors ",chase the trend.", The reader is then introduced to herding models and informational cascades, which can arise in a setting where agents' decision-making is sequential. The insights derived from herding models areused to provide rational explanations for stock market crashes. Models in which all traders are induced to search for the same piece of information are then presented to provide a deeper insight into Keynes' comparison of the stock market with a beauty contest. The book concludes with a brief summary ofbank runs and their connection to financial crises.