1 / 13

Chapter 9 Good Markets

Chapter 9 Good Markets. Private Benefits of Trading. Benefits accrue to traders when they trade . Utilitarian traders – In liquid markets, these traders accomplish their goals cheaply . Profit-motivated traders - Include dealers and speculators.

Download Presentation

Chapter 9 Good Markets

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9 Good Markets

  2. Private Benefits of Trading • Benefits accrue to traders when they trade. • Utilitarian traders – In liquid markets, these traders accomplish their goals cheaply. • Profit-motivated traders - Include dealers and speculators. • Zero-sum game – Profit-motivated traders can profit only if utilitarian traders are willing to trade. • Markets exist only when utilitarian traders exist. • Hence, the welfare of utilitarian traders is more important than the welfare of profit-motivated traders (You may disagree!)

  3. Public Benefits of Trading • Public benefits of trading accrue to everyone, regardless of they use the markets. Positive externalities • Fall into two classes • Public benefits from informative prices • Public benefits from liquid markets

  4. Public Benefits from Informative Prices • Well-functioning markets produce informative prices: prices = fundamental values • Benefits from informative prices • Production and allocation decisions • Capital allocation in the primary markets • Manager allocation in the secondary markets

  5. Production and allocation decisions • Command economies vs. market-based economies • Allocating resources efficiently requires an extraordinary amount of information. • Command economies do poor jobs in information aggregation.

  6. Command Economies • Amount of information is too large. • Receive low-quality information. • Political forces and personal biases • People may not implement plans. • Accountability problems

  7. Market-based Economies • Decision making is distributed to many people throughout the economy. • Each person efficiently allocates his capital to best projects. • Aggregate allocations are globally efficient. • Informative prices play important roles. Prices in market-based economies generally reflect values because buyers and sellers trade when they are different.

  8. Market-based Economies • Work poorly when transaction costs are large or when activities need to be highly coordinated. • Companies are the most important command organizations within a market economy. • People form companies to avoid the excessive negotiation costs.

  9. Firms and Markets • Although firms are small command economies, they are related to the rest of the world through various markets. • Primary capital markets • Secondary capital markets

  10. Primary Capital Markets (IPO) • New capital goes to the best investment ideas. • Pricing investment opportunities. • When prices are informative, good ideas command high prices. • New capital flows to the best ideas.

  11. Secondary Capital Markets • Compensate managers based on share price. • Remove and replace poor managers. • Corporate control market disciplines. • These mechanisms break down when stock prices are noisy!

  12. Public Benefits of Liquid Markets • Utilitarian traders produce positive externalities when they use liquid markets to conduct their businesses more efficiently. • Public benefits of exchange – Market-based economies ensure that resources go to the people who value them most. • Public benefits of hedging – When hedgers can cheaply transfer their risks, they specialize in the most efficient productive processes available to them. • Public benefits of risk sharing – Liquid markets benefit the public by allowing companies to raise new capital at low cost. • Public benefits of facilitated information-based trading. Liquid markets → low price impact → more information-based trading →more informationally efficient markets.

  13. Policy Implications • First promote the private interests of utilitarian traders. • Strive to maximize the public benefits from liquid markets that produce informative prices. • Support the interests of profit-motivated traders that serve the above two. • Discourage profit-motivated traders who exploit other traders.

More Related