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5 - Information asymmetry and information failure: disclosure problems in complex financial markets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

William Sun
Affiliation:
Leeds Metropolitan University
Jim Stewart
Affiliation:
Leeds Metropolitan University
David Pollard
Affiliation:
Leeds Metropolitan University
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Summary

Disclosure of information has been a key to regulation of the financial markets in the United States. Indeed, some have argued that the ‘exclusive focus [of federal securities regulation] is on full disclosure’ (Hazen, 2005). Yet there is relatively little dispute that although most if not all of the risks giving rise to the collapse of the market for structured securities backed by subprime mortgages were disclosed, the disclosure was ineffective. Disclosure failed because of the complexity of those securities and transactions.

This chapter examines disclosure’s insufficiency in addressing information asymmetry, arguing that complexity can cause information failure. There are multiple layers to complexity, the most obvious being complexity caused by increasingly complicated financial securities. But price volatility and liquidity of securities can be nonlinear functions of the interactive behaviour of independent and constantly adapting market participants, producing not only cognizant complexity (i.e., too complex to understand) but also a temporal complexity within securities markets in which events tend to move rapidly into a crisis mode with little time or opportunity to intervene.

Type
Chapter
Information
Corporate Governance and the Global Financial Crisis
International Perspectives
, pp. 95 - 112
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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