21.01.2020; Vortragsreihe
Bundesbank Lecture mit Paolo Pasquariello (University of Michigan) - Frictions and Financial Market Quality
Im Rahmen der Bundesbank Lecture 2019 trägt mit Paolo Pasquariello von der Universiy of Michigan ein international überaus renommierter Wissenschaftler vor. In seinem Vortrag beleuchtet er wie finanzielle Friktionen wie bspw. Informationsasymmetrien, Preismanipulationen oder kurzfristige Anreize von Portfoliomanagern am Finanzmarkt zu Anomalien wie bspw. Marktcrashs, Preisblasen, oder Austrocknen der Liquidität führen können. Die Bundesbank Lecture wird von der Deutschen Bundesbank unterstützt und soll zentrale Themen wie Finanzstabilität, finanzielle Integration und internationale Geldpolitik der interessierten Öffentlichkeit nahebringen.
Abstract:
In his talk Paolo Pasquariello focuses on understanding the forces and frictions affecting financial market quality - the ability of financial markets to price assets correctly. He first shows that when a speculator cares about both the short-term value of her portfolio and her long-term profit, information disclosure is optimal: Public disclosure in the form of a mixture of fundamental information and the speculator’s position induces competitive dealership to revise prices in the direction of the speculator’s position. Using mutual fund disclosure through newspaper articles, he then find that when fund managers have stronger estimated short-term incentives, the frequency of strategic non-anonymous disclosures about stocks in their portfolios increases and those stocks’ liquidity improves, consistent with the model.
About Paolo Pasquariello:
Paolo Pasquariello is Professor of Finance at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan. He has published in major Finance journals and is Associate Editor of the Review of Financial Studies and Co-Editor of the Journal of Financial Markets. His research focuses on the role of financial frictions (such as price manipulation, information asymmetry and heterogeneity, imperfect competition among agents, and endowment shocks) or features of human behavior (such as loss aversion, risk seeking in losses, and short-termism) for the emergence of market anomalies such as periods of high volatility, price bubbles, sudden, severe downward price movements, drying liquidity, or rapid reversals of capital flows. His work is theoretical and empirical and covers 3 broad areas: (i) Information and prices, (ii) Financial crises, and (iii) Government intervention.
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