Andrew G. Atkeson, Andrea L. Eisfeldt, Pierre‐Olivier Weill
We develop a parsimonious model to study the equilibrium and socially optimal decisions of banks to enter, trade in, and possibly exit, an OTC market. Although we endow all banks with the same trading technology, banks' optimal entry and trading decisions endogenously lead to a realistic market structure composed of dealers and customers with distinct trading patterns. We decompose banks' entry incentives into incentives to hedge risk and incentives to make intermediation profits. We show that dealer banks enter more than is socially optimal. In the face of large negative shocks, they may also exit more than is socially optimal when markets are not perfectly resilient.
MLA
Atkeson, Andrew G., et al. “Entry and Exit in OTC Derivatives Markets.” Econometrica, vol. 83, .no 6, Econometric Society, 2015, pp. 2231-2292, https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA11477
Chicago
Atkeson, Andrew G., Andrea L. Eisfeldt, and Pierre‐Olivier Weill. “Entry and Exit in OTC Derivatives Markets.” Econometrica, 83, .no 6, (Econometric Society: 2015), 2231-2292. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA11477
APA
Atkeson, A. G., Eisfeldt, A. L., & Weill, P. (2015). Entry and Exit in OTC Derivatives Markets. Econometrica, 83(6), 2231-2292. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA11477
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