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Department of Economics, UCSD
University of California, San Diego

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Rational Information Choice in Financial Market Equilibrium
Marc-Andreas Muendler, University of California, San Diego

Download the Paper (444 K, PDF file) - March 1, 2005 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:
Adding a stage of signal acquisition to the expected utility model shows that Bayesian updating results in a well de¯ned law of demand for financial information when asset return distributions are conjugate priors to signals such as in the gamma-Poisson case. Signals have a positive marginal utility value that falls in their number if and only if investors are risk averse, asset markets large, and variance-mean ratios of asset returns high in fully revealing rational expectations equilibrium. Expected asset price increases in the number of signals so that expected excess return drops. The diminishing excess return prevents Bayesian investors from unbounded information demand even if signals are costless, unless the riskfree asset is removed. Signals mutually benefit homogeneous investors because revealing asset price permits updating so that a Pareto criterion judges competitive equilibrium as not su±ciently informative. However, asset price responses make incentives for signal acquisition dependent on portfolios so that welfare and distributional consequences become intricately linked when investors are heterogeneous.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Marc-Andreas Muendler, "Rational Information Choice in Financial Market Equilibrium" (March 1, 2005). Department of Economics, UCSD. Paper 2005-04.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucsdecon/2005-04

 
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