Academic Papers

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prediction markets

Papers

A collection of academic papers that are related to prediction markets and they are written by members of the research team.

Information Aggregation Under Ambiguity: Theory and Experimental Evidence

Spyros Galanis, Christos A. Ioannou and Stelios Kotronis

Accepted at the Review of Economic Studies, 2023

We study information aggregation in a dynamic trading model with partially informed and ambiguity averse traders. We show theoretically that separable securities, introduced by Ostrovsky (2012) in the context of Subjective Expected Utility, no longer aggregate information if some traders have imprecise beliefs and are ambiguity averse. Moreover, these securities are prone to manipulation, as the degree of information aggregation can be influenced by the initial price, set by the uninformed market maker. These observations are also confirmed in our experiment, using prediction markets. We define a new class of strongly separable securities which are robust to the above considerations, and show that they characterize information aggregation in both strategic and non-strategic environments. We derive several theoretical predictions, which we are able to confirm in the lab.

Information Aggregation with Costly Information Acquisition

Spyros Galanis and Sergei Mikhalishchev

Working paper, 2024

We study information aggregation in a dynamic trading model with partially informed traders. Ostrovsky [2012] showed that ‘separable’ securities aggregate information in all equilibria, however, separability is not robust to small changes in the traders’ private information. To remedy this problem, we enhance the model by allowing traders to acquire signals with cost κ, in every period. We show that ‘κ separable securities’ aggregate information and, as the cost decreases, nearly all securities become κ separable, irrespective of the traders’ initial private information. Moreover, the switch to κ separabil-
ity happens not gradually but discontinuously, hence even a small decrease in costs can result in a security aggregating information. Finally, even with myopic traders, cheaper information may accelerate or decelerate information
aggregation for all but Arrow-Debreu securities.

Information Aggregation Under Ambiguity: Theory and Experimental Evidence

Spyros Galanis and Stelios Kotronis

B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics, 2021

The ability of markets to aggregate information through prices is examined in a dynamic environment with unawareness. We find that if all traders are able to minimally update their awareness when they observe a price that is counterfactual to their private information, they will eventually reach an agreement, thus generalising the result of Geanakoplos and Polemarchakis [1982]. Moreover, if the traded security is separable, then agreement is on the correct price and there is information aggregation, thus generalizing the result of Ostrovsky [2012] for non-strategic traders. We find that a trader increases her awareness if and only if she is able to become aware of something that other traders are already aware of and, under a mild condition, never becomes aware of anything more. In other words, agreement is more the result of understanding each other, rather than being unboundedly sophisticated.