Econometrica: Jul, 1990, Volume 58, Issue 4
Direct and Indirect Sale of Information
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2938355
p. 901-928
Anat R. Admati, Paul Pfleiderer
In this article we compare two methods for a monopolist to sell information. In a direct sale buyers observe the seller's signal (or noisy versions of it) and subsequently use what they observe to make investment decisions. In an indirect sale the seller creates a portfolio based on his private information and then sells shares to the traders. Indirect sale allows the seller to control more effectively the buyers' reactions to the information, but may not allow as much surplus to be extracted as is possible with direct sale. We show how the optimal selling method depends on the extent to which information is revealed by assets' equilibrium prices.