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We present a model in which the microstructure of trade in a commodity or asset is endogenously determined. Producers and consumers of a commodity (or buyers and sellers of an asset) who wish to trade can choose between two competing types of intermediaries: 'middlemen' (dealer/brokers) and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012786691
We present a model in which the microstructure of trade in a commodity or asset is endogenously determined. Producers and consumers of a commodity (or buyers and sellers of an asset) who wish to trade can choose between two competing types of intermediaries: 'middlemen' (dealer/brokers) and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012786896
What determines how trade in a commodity is divided between privately negotiated transactions via quot;middle menquot; (dealer/brokers) in a telephone or quot;dealer marketquot; versus transactions via quot;market makersquot; (specialists) at publicly observable bid/ask prices? To address this...
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This paper studies the econometric problems associated with estimation of a stochastic process that is endogenously sampled. Our interest is to infer the law of motion of a discrete-time stochastic process {pt} that is observed only at a subset of times {t1,..., tn} that depend on the outcome of...
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