The Existence of Futures Markets, Noisy Rational Expectations and Informational Externalities
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4147767
DOI10.2307/2296900zbMath0371.90011MaRDI QIDQ4147767
Publication date: 1977
Published in: The Review of Economic Studies (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.2307/2296900
91B60: Trade models
Related Items
Partially-revealing rational expectations equilibrium in a competitive economy, Futures markets and commodity options: Hedging and optimality in incomplete markets, Capital asset pricing in an overlapping generations model, Information, endogenous uncertainty and risk aversion, Trade and revelation of information, An equilibrium model of insider trading in continuous time, Price relations on futures markets for storable commodities, Futures markets, production and diversification of risk, The existence of fully rational expectations approximate equilibria with noisy price observations, Expectations equilibria with dispersed forecasts, The existence of rational expectations equilibria in a large economy with noisy price observations, On the qualitative properties of futures market equilibrium, The revelation of information in strategic market games. A critique of rational expectations equilibrium, Aggregate fluctuations as an information transmission mechanism, On the aggregation of information in competitive markets, Divergent rational expectations equilibrium in a dynamic model of a futures market, Spot trading, efficiency, and differential information, Information, trade and common knowledge, A note on 'fulfilled expectations' equilibria, Information, futures prices, and stabilizing speculation, Partial revelation within rational expectations, Market equilibria with endogenous, hierarchical information, Extrinsic uncertainty and the informational role of prices, Nonlinear incentive provision in Walrasian markets: a Cournot convergence approach, Asset pricing in an intertemporal partially-revealing rational expectations equilibrium., Softening competition through forward trading, Price and quantity signals in financial markets