Published February 1993 | Submitted
Working Paper Open

Transaction Prices When Insiders Trade Portfolios

An error occurred while generating the citation.

Abstract

Statistical properties of transaction prices are investigated in the context of a multi-asset extension of Kyle [1985]. Under the restriction that market makers cannot condition prices on volume in other markets, Kyle's model is shown to be consistent with well-documented lack of predictability of individual asset prices, positive autocorrelation of index returns, and low cross-sectional covariance. The covariance estimator of Cohen, e.a. [1983] provides the right estimates of the "true" covariance. However, Kyle's model cannot explain the asymmetry and rank deficiency of the matrix of first-order autocovariances. Asymmetry obtains when the insider limits his strategies to trading a set of pre-determined portfolios. If these portfolios are well-diversified, the matrix of first-order autocovariances is asymptotically rank-deficient. If the insider uses only one portfolio (as when "timing the market"), its asymptotic rank equals one, conform to the empirical results in Gibbons and Ferson [1985].

Additional Information

The author is grateful for comments from participants to the 1993 American Finance Association meetings.

Attached Files

Submitted - sswp835.pdf

Files

sswp835.pdf
Files (373.2 kB)
Name Size Download all
md5:3f44614d917f1bfe79c199de46ab8402
373.2 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
February 2, 2025