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Financial Complexity and Trade

Galanis, Spyros

Authors



Abstract

What are the implications on trading activity if investors are not sophisticated enough to understand and evaluate trades that have a complex payoff structure? Can frictions generated by this type of financial complexity be so severe that they lead to a complete market freeze, like that of the recent financial crisis? Starting from an allocation that is not Pareto optimal, we find that whether complexity impedes trade depends on how investors perceive risk and uncertainty. For smooth convex preferences, such as subjective expected utility, complexity cannot halt trade, even in the extreme case where each investor is so unsophisticated that he can only trade up to one Arrow–Debreu security, without being able to combine two or more in order to construct a complex trade. However, for non-smooth preferences, which allow for kinked indifference curves, such as maxmin expected utility, complexity can completely shut down trade.

Citation

Galanis, S. (2018). Financial Complexity and Trade. Games and Economic Behavior, 112, 219-230

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Aug 31, 2018
Publication Date 2018-11
Deposit Date Sep 8, 2021
Journal Games and Economic Behavior
Print ISSN 0899-8256
Electronic ISSN 1090-2473
Publisher Elsevier
Volume 112
Pages 219-230
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1265104