Abstract

Many experimental studies study market mispricing, however there is a distinct lack of guidance over how mispricing should be measured. This raises concerns about the sensitivity of mispricing results to variations in the measurement procedure. In this paper, we investigate the robustness of previous results with respect to four variations: 1) the choice of interval length, 2) the use of the bid-ask spread as a price proxy, 3) the choice of aggregation function, and 4) controlling for observable market characteristics. While a majority of previous results are unaffected, we still find that roughly 30% of previous hypothesis results change significance.

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