Transparency (market)
In
There are two types of price transparency: 1) I know what price will be charged to me, and 2) I know what price will be charged to you. The two types of price transparency have different implications for differential pricing.[2] A transparent market should also provide necessary information about quality and other product features,[3] although quality can be exceedingly difficult to estimate for some goods, such as artworks.[4]
While the stock market is relatively transparent, hedge funds are notoriously secretive. Researchers in this area have found concerns by hedge funds about the crowding out of their trades through transparency and undesirable effects of incomplete transparency.[5] Some financial professionals, including Wall Street veteran Jeremy Frommer are pioneering the application of transparency to hedge funds by broadcasting live from trading desks and posting detailed portfolios online.[citation needed]
Critical transparency
There is a rich literature in accounting that takes a critical perspective to market transparency, focusing on the nuances and boundaries.[6][7] For example, some researchers question its utility (e.g. Etzioni[8]). This also connects to the performativity of quantitative models[9] or "reactivity."[10] Specific cases include transparency in the art market.[11] There are also studies from finance that note concerns with market transparency, such as perverse effects including decreased market liquidity and increased price volatility.[1] This is one motivation for markets that are selectively transparent, such as "dark pools".[12]
Dynamics of transparency may also differ between investment markets, cambist markets where goods trade without being used up,[13][14] and other types of markets, e.g. goods and services.
In
In the Forex market
There are few markets that require the level of privacy, honesty, and trust between its participants as the Forex (FX) market. This creates great obstacles for traders, investors, and institutions to overcome as there is a lack of transparency, leading to the need to develop trust with trading partners and developing these relationships through social means, such as "gifts of information," which is even seen on the trading floors of global investment banks that service institutional investors.[13]
With little to no transparency, trader's ability to verify transactions becomes virtually impossible, at least if one does not have faith that the market exchange is operating in a well-run fashion, a problem that is unlikely with the major brokerage services open to institutional investors (e.g. Reuters, Bloomberg, and Telerate). In a situation with a problematic market exchange lacking transparency, there would be no trust between the client and the broker, yet surprisingly, there is nonetheless demand to trade in dark pools.[12] This has also become an area of financial innovation.
Forex markets are now also a target for new blockchain innovations, which would allow trading outside of centralized exchanges or change the way these exchanges operate.[16][17]
See also
- Competition regulator
- Consumer organization
- Consumer protection
- Efficient market
- Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (or EITI)
- Information
- International Sugar Organization
- Market anomaly
- Shell corporation
- Transfer pricing
- Transparency (behavior)
- Underground economy
- Valuation (finance)
References
- ^ .
- PMID 17848449.
- ^ "Dictionary of Finance and Banking - Oxford Reference". Retrieved 2017-02-06.
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- ISBN 9780801473777.
- ISSN 1467-9760.
- ^ S2CID 145805302.
- PMID 22104085.
- hdl:11343/113919.
- ^ S2CID 153650371.
- ^ S2CID 13742201.
- S2CID 18812736.
- S2CID 15907952.
- ^ "Understanding How Blockchain Works and Why it Will Transform FX | Finance Magnates". Finance Magnates | Financial and business news. 2016-12-30. Retrieved 2017-06-21.
- ^ Stafford, Philip (18 December 2016). "ICAP looks to process forex trades on blockchain". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.