2018
DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12689
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The Dynamics of Financially Constrained Arbitrage

Abstract: We develop a model in which financially constrained arbitrageurs exploit price discrepancies across segmented markets. We show that the dynamics of arbitrage capital are self‐correcting: following a shock that depletes capital, returns increase, which allows capital to be gradually replenished. Spreads increase more for trades with volatile fundamentals or more time to convergence. Arbitrageurs cut their positions more in those trades, except when volatility concerns the hedgeable component. Financial constrai… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…InGromb and Vayanos (2018), arbitrage spreads are positively related to the spreads' sensitivity to arbitrageur wealth because both characteristics are positively related to cash flow volatility and convergence horizon. 5Isaenko (2015) studies a related model in which long-term traders maximize CARA utility and face transaction costs.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…InGromb and Vayanos (2018), arbitrage spreads are positively related to the spreads' sensitivity to arbitrageur wealth because both characteristics are positively related to cash flow volatility and convergence horizon. 5Isaenko (2015) studies a related model in which long-term traders maximize CARA utility and face transaction costs.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Gromb and Vayanos (), arbitrage spreads are positively related to the spreads' sensitivity to arbitrageur wealth because both characteristics are positively related to cash flow volatility and convergence horizon.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The computation is done through various combinations of the partial derivatives (28) to (31), to account for governments' coordination:any change in policy in country A is matched, simultaneously and symmetrically, by country B. Hence,…”
Section: Proof Of Propositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To know when the G constraint binds, we calculate country A's incentive to inject liquidity unilaterally. Since θ * = θ T A + θ T B , the incentive of an uncoordinated government to inject liquidity is given by adding up derivatives (29) and (31):…”
Section: Proof Of Claim 3 (Hoarding Liquidity Is Sub-optimal)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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