Working paper

Liquid Bundles

Emmanuel Farhi, and Jean Tirole

Abstract

The paper revisits and qualifies existing insights on security design. A rich literature argues that tranching creates debt-like instruments that are robust to adverse selection or discourage wasteful information acquisition. Yet, for a given information structure, while tranching confines and liquefies the safe part of a cash flow (the insulation effect), bundling makes the risky part more liquid (the trading adjuvant effect). Moreover, tranching always has adverse welfare effects on information acquisition: It encourages (discourages) information acquisition when it should be deterred (encouraged). The paper provides conditions under which tranching reduces welfare even when the insulation effect dominates the trading adjuvant effect. The paper’s second contribution is to analyze the velocity of assets that are repeatedly traded. The dynamic model can be nested into the static one and insights are shown to be closely related to those on tranching. The central insight is that liquidity is self-fulfilling: A perception of future illiquidity creates current illiquidity.

Keywords

Liquidity; velocity; security design; tranching; information acquisition;

JEL codes

  • D82: Asymmetric and Private Information • Mechanism Design
  • E51: Money Supply • Credit • Money Multipliers
  • G12: Asset Pricing • Trading Volume • Bond Interest Rates
  • G14: Information and Market Efficiency • Event Studies • Insider Trading

Replaced by

Emmanuel Farhi, and Jean Tirole, Liquid Bundles, Journal of Economic Theory, vol. 158, July 2015, pp. 634–655.

Reference

Emmanuel Farhi, and Jean Tirole, Liquid Bundles, TSE Working Paper, n. 12-328, July 2012, revised October 2013.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 12-328, July 2012, revised October 2013