Control of market institutions
Not all financial markets operate within formally constituted exchanges, but those that do can be divided into two categories.
Regulation of financial markets
Practically all financial markets are regulated in some way or another. The regulation is typically highly complex – too complex to warrant discussion here. Very often exchanges themselves form part of the regulatory mechanism, together with the involvement of external organizations. Thus, for example, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) oversees financial markets in the United States, while the Financial Services Authority (FSA) has broadly similar responsibilities in the United Kingdom. The declared purpose of regulation is normally to protect investors from practices and conduct deemed to be unfair or improper. Most directly, the protection is intended to guard against fraud. More indirectly, regulation ostensibly seeks to foster competition, with resulting benefits for the consumers of financial services. Investors themselves would possibly favour protection against all losses sustained on their investments, including losses incurred when asset prices fall. Such comprehensive protection stretches beyond the bounds of regulation that has been, or is likely to be, adopted. However, when losses occur as a consequence of what is perceived to be bad advice, investors may feel justified in seeking compensation – either from those who gave the advice or from the regulators responsible for overseeing the advisers. In these circumstances, resorting to litigation will test how far the law requires investors to bear the consequences of their own decisions. Much of the regulation in financial markets is self-regulation. Whatever the merits of such regulation (such as the expertise of the regulators in their own lines of business), the justification of its proponents should not necessarily be taken at face value. For regulation can have its drawbacks. These include:
Competition within and among financial markets
As already mentioned, many financial markets approximate the competitive ideal in that market participants typically take prices as given, beyond their individual control. However, although the underlying ‘commodities’ (the assets) are homogeneous, the services offered by brokers and dealers may well be differentiated, offering the scope for non-price competition. Moreover, the organization of exchanges and their regulation can have the effect of restricting competition among market participants. Competition among members of the market can be restricted in several ways.
Trading and asset prices in a call market
Among the market mechanisms described a call market is one of the simplest and provides a starting point for modelling flows of trading in asset markets. In the model outlined here, market participants are divided into three groups:
The informed and uninformed investors are interpreted as public investors, while market makers exist to ensure that a price that balances the purchases and sales of public investors is realized. Members of all three groups are assumed to be risk-neutral. Exchanges of assets among investors could take place for a multitude of reasons, here divided into two:
The information motive applies to those investors who trade because they seek to make gains (or avoid losses) on the basis of their beliefs about future payoffs from assets. The liquidity motive is a catch-all, encompassing the other reasons why investors trade. It includes circumstances in which investors sell assets to raise funds for consumption or to meet some unforeseen contingency, or when savings flows are invested in traded assets. The caprice and whims that motivate noise traders are also absorbed into the liquidity motive.
Bid–ask spreads: inventory-based models
Explanations of the bid–ask spread fall into two groups: inventory-based theories, and information-based theories. In each case market participants are classified into market makers and public investors. Market makers are assumed to be dealers who quote bid and ask prices at which they guarantee to buy and sell the asset (if the size of each order falls within a pre-announced range). Public investors are subdivided into informed and uninformed investors as in the previous section, though this distinction is relevant only for the information-based models. The framework studied here abstracts from reality in a number of ways. Dealers who are not market makers are ignored. Brokerage services are not treated separately from the services of market makers. Hence, the bid–ask spread should be interpreted as including all transaction costs (such as commission fees and taxes). Also, phenomena such as deals made within quoted spreads and special arrangements for large block orders are neglected.
In both inventory-based and information-based theories, public investors are assumed to arrive at the market in a random flow and to issue orders to buy or sell one unit of the asset. The market makers execute buy orders at the ask price and sell orders at the bid price. Price quotations are then changed according to some rule, studied below, according to the market makers’ observations of orders to buy or sell the asset. Inventory-based models view the price quotations as determined by the need for market makers to hold inventories of the asset to satisfy the flow of demands and supplies from public investors. The main influences on the bid–ask spread are assumed to be these.
Bid–ask spreads: information-based models
The information-based models studied in this section take it for granted that inventories are always adequate and that the costs of holding them can be ignored. Instead, the analysis highlights