Financial claustrophobia
Financial claustrophobia
Rate this book:
About This Book
"There are many examples of markets where an agent who wants to get out of an investment position quickly may find himself trapped and forced to remain in that position because of a lack of liquidity. What are the asset-pricing implications when agents cannot always buy and sell assets immediately? We study this issue in a multi-asset exchange economy with heterogeneous agents. In this model, agents can trade initially, but then cannot trade again until after a trading blackout period. The more liquid the market, the sooner agents can trade again. Faced with illiquidity, agents abandon diversification and choose highly polarized portfolios. Risky assets are held primarily by the less-patient short-horizon agents in the economy. Polarization causes the usual risk-return tradeo. to break down and an asset's price may have more to do with the demographics of who owns it than with the riskiness of its cash flows. Risky assets are generally more valuable in an illiquid market than in a liquid market. Market illiquidity can also have large effects on the equity premium"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Francis A. Longstaff
An empirical analysis of the p
An empirical analysis of the pricing of collateralized debt obligations
Corporate earnings and the equ
Corporate earnings and the equity premium
Corporate yield spreads
Corporate yield spreads
How sovereign is sovereign cre
How sovereign is sovereign credit risk?
Optimal recursive refinancing
Optimal recursive refinancing and the valuation of mortgage-backed securities
The flight-to-liquidity premiu
The flight-to-liquidity premium in U.S. Treasury bond prices