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18 - Information (in)efficiency in prediction markets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2009

Erik Snowberg
Affiliation:
Economist
Justin Wolfers
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Business and Public Policy Wharton School University of Pennsylvania
Eric Zitzewitz
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Economics Stanford Business School
Leighton Vaughan Williams
Affiliation:
Nottingham Trent University
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter examines a new class of markets at the intersection of traditional betting and traditional financial markets. We call these ‘prediction markets’. Like both financial and betting markets, prediction markets focus on uncertain outcomes and involve trading in risks. Prices from these markets establish forecasts about the probabilities, mean and median outcomes, and correlations among future events. These prices have been used to accurately predict vote shares in elections, the box office success of Hollywood movies and the probability that Saddam Hussein would be deposed by a certain date. Other names for these markets include ‘virtual stock markets’, ‘event futures’, and ‘information markets’.

Financial economists have long known about the information-aggregating properties of markets. Indeed, the efficient markets hypothesis, a centrepiece of financial theory, can be stated simply as, ‘market prices incorporate all available information’. While financial instruments can be very complex, prediction markets tend to be analytically simple. Their current simplicity, however, belies their powerful potential future as a way to hedge against geopolitical and other forms of risk as envisioned by Athanasoulis, Shiller and van Wincoop (1999) and Shiller (2003).

Currently, most prediction markets are quite small, with turnover ranging from a few thousand dollars on the early political markets run by the University of Iowa, to several million bet in the 2004 election cycle on TradeSports, to hundreds of millions bet on the announcement of economic indicators in Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank's ‘Economic Derivatives’ market.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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References

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