John R. Birge, Ali Hortaçsu, Ignacia Mercadal, J. Michael Pavlin
We study the case of financial traders in the Midwest electricity market, where they are expected to arbitrage price differences that result in inefficiencies. Using exogenous variation in financial trading from the financial crisis and a period of high transaction costs, we show speculators had only a weak effect. Moreover, while arbitrage was restricted by transaction costs imposed by regulation, some financial players bet in exactly the opposite direction of the pricing gap, sustaining large losses while doing so. We show this is consistent with price manipulation intended to increase the value of a related instrument that bets on local price differences (FTRs).