Seminario de Economia "Monetary Exchange in Over-the-Counter Markets: A Theory of Speculative Bubbles, the Fed Model, and Self-fulfilling Liquidity Crises"

Miércoles 16 de Septiembre, 17h

Presentado por Ricardo Lagos
Abstract
We develop a model of monetary exchange in over-the-counter markets to study the effects of monetary policy on asset prices and standard measures of financial liquidity, such as bid-ask spreads, trade volume, and the incentives of dealers to supply immediacy, both by participating in the market-making activity and by holding asset inventories on their own account. The theory predicts that asset prices carry a speculative premium that reflects the asset’s marketability and depends on monetary policy as well as the microstructure of the market where it is traded. These liquidity considerations imply a positive correlation between the real yield on stocks and the nominal yield on Treasury bonds—an empirical observation long regarded anomalous. The theory also exhibits rational expectations equilibria with recurring belief driven events that resemble liquidity crises, i.e., times of sharp persistent declines in asset prices, trade volume, and dealer participation in market-making activity, accompanied by large increases in spreads and abnormally long trading delays.

Ricardo Lagos
Professor of Economics at New York University. His research interests are in macroeconomics, with emphasis on monetary and labor economics. Ricardo's research has been published in several journals. He is currently Editor of the Journal of Economic Theory.
Ricardo received his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1997. He has worked as a Lecturer (UK equivalent of Assistant Professor) in the Department of Economics at the London School of Economics, and as a Senior Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. He has taught courses in labor and monetary economics at Universidad de Los Andes, University of Tokyo, and is a regular Visiting Professor at Universidad Di Tella. 


Lugar: Campus Alcorta: Av. Figueroa Alcorta 7350, Ciudad de Buenos Aires.
Contacto: Cecilia Lafuente, Departamento de Economía