Abstract
Complete limit order data from Korea show individual stocks' demand and supply elasticities correlating negatively in short windows. That is, whenever a stock's demand is unusually elastic, its supply is unusually inelastic, and vice versa. However, in long windows, individual stocks' demand and supply elasticities correlate positively. Notably, both fall about 40% with the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, and remain depressed long after the market and macroeconomic variables recover. A parsimonious model explains both findings with investor information heterogeneity and risk-aversion parameters, fixed in the short-run, being permanently shifted by the crisis.
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CITATION STYLE
DIerker, M., Kim, J. W., Lee, J., & Morck, R. (2016). Investors’ Interacting Demand and Supply Curves for Common Stocks. Review of Finance, 20(4), 1517–1547. https://doi.org/10.1093/rof/rfv042
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