Search results for "Market rate"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Price discrimination and market power in export markets: The case of the ceramic tile industry.

2005

This paper combines the pricing-to-market equation and the residual demand elasticity equation to measure the extent of competition in the export markets of ceramic tiles, which has been dominated by Italian and Spanish producers since the late eighties. The findings show that the tile exporters enjoyed substantial market power over the period 1988-1998, and limited evidence that the export market has become more competitive over time.

Price elasticity of demandFactor marketMarket ratePrice discriminationjel:F14jel:L61MicroeconomicsCompetition (economics)price discrimination market power export markets ceramic tile industryvisual_artjel:L13visual_art.visual_art_mediumEconomicsCeramicMarket powerTileGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceIndustrial organizationJournal of Applied Economics
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The social costs of bank market power: Evidence from Mexico

2008

This paper estimates the social costs of market power (Harberger's triangle) in the Mexican banking system over the period 1993–2005. It also tests the so-called “quiet life” hypothesis which postulates a negative effect of market power on bank management efficiency. The social cost attributable to market power in 2005 is 0.15% of GDP, while that deriving from the cost (profit) inefficiency of banking management is 0.021% (0.075%) of GDP. The results allow us to reject the quiet life hypothesis in the deposits market. However, market power in the setting of the interest rate on loans has a negative effect on cost efficiency. Journal of Comparative Economics 36 (3) (2008) 467–488.

Economic efficiencyMacroeconomicsFactor marketEconomics and EconometricsLower of cost or marketMarket ratebusiness.industrySocial costmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary economicsInterest rateEconomicsRetail bankingMarket powerbusinessmedia_commonJournal of Comparative Economics
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How markets slowly digest changes in supply and demand

2008

In this article we revisit the classic problem of tatonnement in price formation from a microstructure point of view, reviewing a recent body of theoretical and empirical work explaining how fluctuations in supply and demand are slowly incorporated into prices. Because revealed market liquidity is extremely low, large orders to buy or sell can only be traded incrementally, over periods of time as long as months. As a result order flow is a highly persistent long-memory process. Maintaining compatibility with market efficiency has profound consequences on price formation, on the dynamics of liquidity, and on the nature of impact. We review a body of theory that makes detailed quantitative pr…

Factor marketPhysics - Physics and Society050208 financeMarket rateQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Market clearing05 social sciencesFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesMarket microstructurePhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Supply and demandMarket liquidityTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)MicroeconomicsFOS: Economics and businessFinancial Markets Econophysics Microstructure Stochastic processes0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsMarket impactCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Trading leads to scale-free self-organization

2009

Financial markets display scale-free behavior in many different aspects. The power-law behavior of part of the distribution of individual wealth has been recognized by Pareto as early as the nineteenth century. Heavy-tailed and scale-free behavior of the distribution of returns of different financial assets have been confirmed in a series of works. The existence of a Pareto-like distribution of the wealth of market participants has been connected with the scale-free distribution of trading volumes and price-returns. The origin of the Pareto-like wealth distribution, however, remained obscure. Here we show that it is the process of trading itself that under two mild assumptions spontaneously…

Statistics and ProbabilityFactor marketPhysics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Market rateFinancial economicsFinancial marketQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Market microstructureCondensed Matter Physicscomputer.software_genreDomestic marketTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businessOrder (exchange)EconomicsNational wealthAlgorithmic tradingcomputer
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