Inside Trading, Public Disclosure and Imperfect Competition
Fuzhou Gong, Hong Liu

TL;DR
This paper develops a multi-period insider trading model with public disclosure and multiple insiders, analyzing how these factors influence trading strategies, market depth, and information revelation over time.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-insider Kyle-style model with public disclosure, revealing effects on trading behavior, market depth, and the speed of information revelation.
Findings
Competition among insiders reduces profits and increases market prices.
Public disclosure induces mixed strategies and affects market depth.
Information is fully revealed instantly under continuous trading.
Abstract
In this paper, we present a multi-period trading model in the style of Kyle (1985)'s inside trading model, by assuming that there are at least two insiders in the market with long-lived private information, under the requirement that each insider publicly discloses his stock trades after the fact. Based on this model, we study the influences of "public disclosure" and "competition among insiders" on the trading behaviors of insiders. We find that the "competition among insiders" leads to higher effective price and lower insiders' profits, and the "public disclosure" makes each insider play a mixed strategy in every round except the last one. An interesting find is that as the total number of auctions goes to infinity, the market depth and the trading intensity at the first auction are all constants with the requirement of "public disclosure", while the market depth at the first auction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinancial Markets and Investment Strategies · Stochastic processes and financial applications · Stock Market Forecasting Methods
