Institutions, Liquidity and Asset Prices
The Swedish Institute of Financial Research (SIFR) is pleased to invite interested academics and practitioners to a Conference on âInstitutions, Liquidity, and Asset Pricesâ on August 31 and September 1, 2006, in Stockholm.

In recent decades, several empirical deviations from the predictions of neoclassical, frictionless asset pricing theories have been discovered. In order to explain these empirical patterns, researchers have started to study the role of frictions such as transaction costs, shortâsales constraints, asymmetric information, agency problems, investor irrationality, and the role of financial institutions and intermediaries in the pricing of financial assets.
The first conference day aims to bring together leading academics with financial practitioners and policymakers to discuss this research and its broader implications for practice and policy. There will be keyânote presentations by leading scholars in the field, which will be followed by a panel discussion where practitioners get to express their views on these issues. The second conference day has a standard academic format, and aims to provide an academic forum showcasing the frontier in asset pricing research.
Open Conference Program, Thursday, August 31
08:30 Coffee and welcome.
09:00â12:30 Presentation: Darrell Duffie, Stanford University: âCapital Immobility: Implications for Asset Pricesâ.
Presentation: Andrew Metrick , University of Pennsylvania: âLiquidity Risk and Liquidity Constraintsâ.
Coffee.
Presentation: Kenneth French, Dartmouth College: âEquilibrium Markets: The Efficient Amount of Inefficiencyâ.
12:30â13:30 Lunch
13:30â17:00 Presentation: Owen Lamont, Yale University: âSmart Money, Dumb Moneyâ.
Presentation: Jeremy Stein, Harvard University: âArbitrage by Funds and Firmsâ.
Coffee
Panel Discussion: How do institutions affect asset prices?
Panel questions:
⢠Is increased institutional ownership stabilizing or destabilizing for asset prices and markets?
⢠What type of institutional owners will dominate in the future?
⢠Is short selling keeping market prices closer to their fundamental values?
⢠Do we need changes in regulation to make markets more efficient?
Panelists: Hans Dalborg, Nordea, Niklas Ekvall, Carnegie, Peter Norman, Seventh AP Fund, and Peter Thelin, Brummer & Partners.
17:00 Concluding remarks.
Academic Conference Program, Friday, September 1
08:30 Coffee.
09:00â09:45 Presentation: Itay Goldstein, Wharton, and Wei Jiang, Columbia University: âCostly Communication, Shareholder Activism, and Limits to Arbitrageâ.
Discussion: Jeremy Stein, Harvard University.
09:45â10:30 Presentation: Chester Spatt, SEC and Carnegie Mellon University: âEquilibrium asset pricing and portfolio choice under asymmetric informationâ.
Discussion: Michael Brennan, UCLA.
10:30â11:00 Coffee.
11:00â11:45 Presentation: Nicolae Garleanu, Wharton: âPortfolio choice and pricing in illiquid marketsâ.
Discussion: JeanâPierre Zigrand, London School if Economics.
11:45â12:30 Presentation: Darrell Duffie, Stanford University: âSystemic Dynamics in the Federal Funds Marketâ.
Discussion: TBA.
12:30â13:30 Lunch.
13:30â14:15 Presentation: Anna Scherbina, Harvard: âInheriting Losersâ.
Discussion: Ludovic Phalippou, University of Amsterdam.
14:15â15:00 Presentation: Ingrid Werner, Ohio State: âCan shortâsellers predict returns? Daily evidenceâ.
Discussion: Frank de Jong, Tilburg University.
15:00â15:15 Coffee
15:15â16:00 Presentation: Owen Lamont, Yale: âThe earnings announcement premium and trading volumeâ.
Discussion: Chris Malloy, London Business School.
16:00 Closing of conference.