Opacity, liquidity and disclosure requirements

We present a model that links the opacity of an asset to its liquidity. We show that while low‐opacity assets are liquid, intermediate levels of opacity provide incentives for investors to acquire private information, causing adverse selection and illiquidity. High opacity, however, benefits liquidi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of business finance & accounting 2022-05, Vol.49 (5-6), p.658-689
Hauptverfasser: Stenzel, André, Wagner, Wolf
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container_title Journal of business finance & accounting
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creator Stenzel, André
Wagner, Wolf
description We present a model that links the opacity of an asset to its liquidity. We show that while low‐opacity assets are liquid, intermediate levels of opacity provide incentives for investors to acquire private information, causing adverse selection and illiquidity. High opacity, however, benefits liquidity by reducing the value of a unit of private information. The cross‐section of bid–ask spreads of US firms is shown to be broadly consistent with this hump‐shaped relationship between opacity and illiquidity. Our analysis suggests that uniform disclosure standards may be suboptimal; efficient disclosure can instead be achieved through a two‐tier standard system or by subsidizing voluntary disclosure.
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identifier ISSN: 1468-5957
ispartof Journal of business finance & accounting, 2022-05, Vol.49 (5-6), p.658-689
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0306-686X
1468-5957
language eng
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source Wiley Journals; Business Source Complete
subjects Assets
asymmetric information
Disclosure
disclosure requirements
Liquidity
opacity
title Opacity, liquidity and disclosure requirements
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