Abstract
I study the role of purely financial players in electricity markets, where they trade alongside physical buyers and sellers. In this context, physical sellers intertemporally price discriminate, leading to price differences that financial traders arbitrage, thus restricting producers' market power. Using detailed individual data, I examine physical and financial firms' response to regulation that exogenously increased financial trading. I show that the effect of financial traders on generators' market power depends on whether firms are in a static Nash equilibrium or not. I then develop a structural test of static Nash equilibrium and show the null of static Nash does not hold during the period of reduced financial trading. To implement the test, I present a new method to study the competitive structure of electricity markets using machine learning tools to define markets. I find that increased financial trading reduced generators' market power and increased consumer surplus.
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