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Asymmetric Information and Bubbles: An Experiment

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Starting point is the well-known basic setup of Smith, Suchanek and Williams ... The following matrix reveals pro-rata transactions, measured by the total amount ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Asymmetric Information and Bubbles: An Experiment


1
Asymmetric Information and Bubbles An Experiment
  • Michael Brandner
  • Jürgen Huber
  • Michael Kirchler
  • Matthias Sutter
  • all University of Innsbruck

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Model description
  • Experimental implementation
  • Hypotheses
  • Results and interpretation
  • Concluding remarks

3
Introduction
  • Starting point is the well-known basic setup of
    Smith, Suchanek and Williams (1988)
    subsequently SSW
  • Outstanding characteristic declining fundamental
    value in the course of a market
  • Typically, bubbles can be observed in this
    setting
  • Related literature, revealing determinants for
    bubble reduction
  • Less frequent dividend payments (Smith et al.
    2000)
  • Constant fundamental value (Noussair et al. 2001)
  • Detailed instructions (Lei et al. 2001)
  • Futures markets (Noussair and Tucker 2004)
  • Experience (Dufwenberg et al. 2005)
  • Short selling (Haruvy and Noussair 2006)

4
Model description
  • Basic features
  • Assets of a virtual enterprise are traded - after
    every trading period the stock pays a dividend
    amounting to either zero or 20 MU (given equal
    probability)
  • All traders know the dividend generating process,
    but nobody exhibits information about the actual
    dividend realizations before a periods
    termination
  • No buy-out option is introduced so that assets
    are worthless after a rounds termination (one
    round being 10 successive periods), implying
    declining fundamental values

5
Model description
  • We test for the impact of different information
    structures on bubble formation public
    information and asymmetric information
  • Reference treatment (T1) symmetric (non-)
    information about future dividends (comparable
    e.g. to SSW (1988), Dufwenberg et. al (2005))
    all traders are of type I0 (just knowing the
    dividend generating process)
  • Public information (T2) each trader is informed
    about the dividend realization of the current
    period from the outset all traders are type I1
  • Asymmetric information (T3) on average, traders
    also know one future dividend, but this
    information is asymmetrically distributed two
    traders are of type I0, two of I1, and two are
    allocated to type I2 (so-called insiders, knowing
    the current and next periods dividend
    realizations)

6
Experimental implementation
  • One market is populated by six traders -
    distribution of information levels in the three
    treatments
  • We replicate three rounds in a market one round
    consisting of 10 periods (lasting for 120 seconds
    each)
  • Initial endowments 3,000 MU and 10 assets/1,000
    MU and 30 assets (expected final profit is equal)
  • Money and asset holdings are carried over from
    period to period, but reset to the respective
    starting levels after a rounds termination (no
    buy-out option, assets life-span is ten
    periods)

7
Experimental implementation
  • The market is a continuous double auction with
    open order book, implemented with z-Tree
    (Fischbacher, 2007)
  • Subjects can trade any quantity of assets, given
    the limitations of their asset inventory and cash
    endowment (neither loans are provided nor is
    short selling allowed)
  • We conduct six markets per treatment for a total
    of 18 markets (at the University of Innsbruck)
  • Participants have been business students with no
    previous experience in similar experiments

8
Trading screen
Information about future dividend(s)
9
History screen
10
Hypotheses
  • H1 Public information (T2) about current
    periods dividend decreases bubble-size (compared
    to T1)
  • H2 Asymmetric information (T3) about future
    dividends decreases bubble-size (compared to T1)
  • H3 Informed traders will use the fundamental
    information provided so that prices increase when
    they see high dividends and fall when they see
    low dividends
  • H4 Subjects in T3 have an increased incentive to
    trade across information levels

11
Results
12
Results
13
Results
14
Results
15
Results
Average price departures T1 40.6 MU T2 25.3
MU T3 18.4 MU
16
Results impact on bubble-size
  • Comparing bubbles (overvaluation trading price
    minus corresponding fundamental value) in the
    three treatments pairwise (two-sided Mann-Whitney
    U-tests)
  • ? H1 and H2 cannot be rejected bubbles are
    significantly smaller in markets with knowledge
    about the current dividend (T2 public
    information), and smaller again when dividend
    information is asymmetrically distributed (T3)

17
Explaining bubble-size reduction in T2 and T3
  • H3 Informed traders will use the fundamental
    information provided so that prices increase when
    they see high dividends and fall when they see
    low dividends
  • We examine the relationship between known
    positive/negative dividend realizations and the
    extent of overvaluation (trading price minus the
    corresponding fundamental value) correlation
    implies prices closer to fundamentals
  • ? H3 cannot be rejected informed trader
    obviously concentrate more on the fundamentals of
    the stock (than on the hope for capital gains)
    with the consequence that prices track
    fundamentals closer

18
Trade activities within and across information
levels in T3
  • H4 Subjects in T3 have an increased incentive to
    trade across information levels
  • If subjects in T3 do indeed base their trading
    decision on their given dividend information,
    traders within any given information level should
    be rather homogeneous in their trading decisions
  • The following matrix reveals pro-rata
    transactions, measured by the total amount of
    accomplished trades in T3 (n1334)


I0 I1 I2
I0 4.1 22.6 30.3
I1 - 6.3 27.7
I2 - - 9.0
19
Trade activities within and across information
levels in T3
  • Trading frequency is significantly lower between
    information levels than across
  • A possible explanation is that traders within
    each information level form similar beliefs based
    on the information they get and trade on these
    beliefs
  • ? H4 cannot be rejected additional support that
    traders in T3 increasingly focus on fundamentals
    (thus implying that prices track fundamentals
    closer)

20
Concluding remarks
  • Both changes to the standard setup public and
    asymmetric information reduce bubbles
    significantly (more pronounced effect in the
    latter treatment)
  • Informed subjects in T2 and T3 base trading
    decisions on the information they receive, thus
    prices track fundamentals closer, making
    speculation less likely to occur
  • Implication Real financial markets are
    undoubtedly characterized by mixed-experienced
    traders (recall Dufwenberg et. al (2005)) with
    asymmetric information about future cash flows,
    so that it should not be surprising that bubbles
    are indeed rare. The spectacular ones are less
    than five in a century (e.g. 1929, 1987 and the
    late 1990ies)!

21
Thank you for your attention!
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