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Journal Article
The Incentive to Sell Financial Market Information
Journal of Financial Intermediation
Author(s)
Investment advisory firms and brokerage firms hire analysts to uncover profitable securities investment opportunities. Then these firms sell the information (either directly or indirectly) to others. Why? Given that the information has value, why do these firms not keep the information to themselves and trade solely for their own accounts? Because of competition, information is more valuable when fewer people trade on the information. This paper shows that selling information is a strategic response by competing informed traders. Specifically, it is a means for informed traders to commit to trade aggressively, thereby inducing other informed traders to trade less aggressively.
Date Published:
1995
Citations:
Fishman, Michael J., Kathleen Hagerty. 1995. The Incentive to Sell Financial Market Information. Journal of Financial Intermediation. (2)95-115.