William Fuchs
Institution
UT Austin
PhD Year
2005
wfuchs@gmail.com
FTG Membership
Member
Website
https://sites.google.com/site/wfuchs/research
Featured Work
Nov 22, 2024
Rules versus Disclosure: Prudential Regulation and Market Discipline
We study the joint design of two prominent micro-prudential policy tools: bank
regulation that enforces operational standards via rules, and market discipline through
information disclosure. Disclosure can be state-contingent but creates a trade-off between
incentives and the ex-post protection of weak banks. Hence, regulators use rules
to maintain incentives and imperfect disclosure to provide ex-post insurance. In the
optimal design, there...
Nov 15, 2022
Time Trumps Quantity in the Market for Lemons
We consider a dynamic adverse selection model where privately informed sellers of divisible assets can choose how much of their asset to sell at each point in time to competitive buyers. With commitment, delay and lower quantities are equivalent ways to signal higher quality. Only the discounted quantity traded is pinned down in equilibrium. With spot contracts and observable past trades, there is a unique and fully separating...
Mar 12, 2019
Liquidity Sentiments
We develop a rational theory of liquidity sentiments in which the market outcome in any given period depends on agents' expectations about market conditions in future periods. Our theory is based on the interaction between adverse selection and resale considerations giving rise to an intertemporal coordination problem that yields multiple self-fulfilling equilibria. We construct "sentiment" equilibria in which sunspots generate fluctuations in prices, volume, and...
Jul 30, 2018
Optimal Contracting and the Organization of Knowledge
We study contractual arrangements that support an efficient use of time in a knowledge-
intensive economy in which agents endogenously specialize in either production or consulting.
The resulting market for advice is plagued by informational problems, since both the diffi-
culty of the questions posed to consultants and the knowledge of those consultants are hard to
assess. We show that spot...