Seminar

Price Inference in Small Markets

Marzena Rostek (University of Wisconsin - Madison)

June 5, 2012, 11:00–12:30

Toulouse

Room AMPHI S

Economic Theory Seminar

Abstract

This paper investigates the effects of market size on the ability of price to aggregate traders’ private information. To account for heterogeneity in correlation of trader values, a Gaussian model of double auction is introduced that departs from the standard information structure based on a common (fundamental) shock. The paper shows that markets are informationally efficient only if correlations of values coincide across all bidder pairs. As a result, with heterogeneously interdependent values, price informativeness may not increase monotonically with market size. As a necessary and sufficient condition for the monotonicity, price informativeness increases with the number of traders if the implied reduction in (the absolute value of) an average correlation statistic of an information structure is sufficiently small.

Keywords

Information aggregation; double auction; divisible good auction; heterogeneous correlations; commonality;