TY - CHAP
T1 - The matching of interactive agents in the futures stock market and the U-Mart experiment
AU - Aruka, Yuji
AU - Koyama, Yuhsuke
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2011 Selection and editorial matter, Volker Caspari; individual chapters, the contributors.
PY - 2013/1/1
Y1 - 2013/1/1
N2 - It is usually considered that the market is not regarded as fair if any agent participating in the market fieldshould a priori know explicitly the others’ situations or preferences. Without this kind of ignorance among participating agents, market trading becomes less fair as more personal information becomes revealed. A classical auctioneer simplybehaves as a catalyst to coordinate a set of orders. The auctioneer should a priori not collect all asks/bids among the participating agents. In this context, even the submission of a sealed bid may violate the fairness of the market. So theclassical theory of auction starts from the assumption of complete ignorance. This implies that the auctioneer does not employ any cumulated form of supply or demand, i.e., the supply/demand curve. The visible curves may no longer be compatible with the assumption of ignorance. Now we examine a numerical example similar to one which Morishima (1984) took. Ifwe neglect the ignorance of personal information, we can immediately construct the supply curve by cumulating the order at each price starting from the order at the lowest price (the market order), while the demand curve by cumulating the orders at each price starting from the order at the highest price (the market order). These curves thus are independentlyderived. We call this method “the collective method.” First of all, we verify by the use of a numerical example that theclassical procedure can derive the same equilibrium as the collective method.
AB - It is usually considered that the market is not regarded as fair if any agent participating in the market fieldshould a priori know explicitly the others’ situations or preferences. Without this kind of ignorance among participating agents, market trading becomes less fair as more personal information becomes revealed. A classical auctioneer simplybehaves as a catalyst to coordinate a set of orders. The auctioneer should a priori not collect all asks/bids among the participating agents. In this context, even the submission of a sealed bid may violate the fairness of the market. So theclassical theory of auction starts from the assumption of complete ignorance. This implies that the auctioneer does not employ any cumulated form of supply or demand, i.e., the supply/demand curve. The visible curves may no longer be compatible with the assumption of ignorance. Now we examine a numerical example similar to one which Morishima (1984) took. Ifwe neglect the ignorance of personal information, we can immediately construct the supply curve by cumulating the order at each price starting from the order at the lowest price (the market order), while the demand curve by cumulating the orders at each price starting from the order at the highest price (the market order). These curves thus are independentlyderived. We call this method “the collective method.” First of all, we verify by the use of a numerical example that theclassical procedure can derive the same equilibrium as the collective method.
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U2 - 10.4324/9780203830291-15
DO - 10.4324/9780203830291-15
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:84917489736
SN - 9780415596831
SP - 145
EP - 167
BT - The Evolution of Economic Theory
PB - Taylor and Francis
ER -