Yizhou Xiao

Yizhou Xiao
PhD Student, Finance
PhD Program Office Graduate School of Business Stanford University 655 Knight Way Stanford, CA 94305

Yizhou Xiao

Faculty Advisors

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Job Market Paper

Informed Trading and Intertemporal Substitution: The Limits of the No-Trade Theorem
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I examine the conditions for the no-trade theorem to hold in multiperiod consumption settings and show it no longer holds in many reasonable scenarios. In situations where agents have different concerns for intertemporal substitution, information-based trade can be mutually acceptable because it enables agents to readjust their consumption profiles based on future consumption shocks. I show that the existing literature that finds no-trade results in various multiperiod consumption settings crucially depends on specific preference assumptions that lead to risk aversion dominating concerns for intertemporal substitution. The no-trade theorem fails to hold when a wider range of utility functions with a more important role for intertemporal substitution are considered. Intertemporal substitution bridges information-based trading and consumption-based asset pricing. Consumption-based asset pricing models are natural candidates to analyze information-based trading, and information-based trading affects the volatility of individual consumption processes. Quantitative analysis demonstrates that besides asset pricing implications, information-based trading related to intertemporal consumption smoothing can also explain a significant part of the trading volume observed in financial markets.

Working Papers

Collateral Constraints, Access to Debt Financing and Firm Growth
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Pessimistic Leverage

Work in Progress

Lending constraints for banks and the Chinese loan quota system (With Lin William Cong)

VC Fund as a Portfolio