Lecture Notes In Market Microstructure And Trading

Lecture Notes In Market Microstructure And Trading
Author: Peter Joakim Westerholm
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2018-11-29
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9813234113

This book, written by Joakim Westerholm, Professor of Finance and former trading professional, is intended to be used as basis for developing courses in Securities markets, Trading, and Market microstructure and connects theoretic rigor with practical real world applications.Market technology evolves, the roles of market participants change, and whole market segments disappear to be replaced by new ways to exchange securities. Yet, the same underlying economic principles continue to drive trading in securities markets. Thus, the scope of the book is global, providing a framework that is relevant both for current market designs and for future markets we will see develop. It is designed to stay relevant in a rapidly evolving field.The book contains a selection of lecture notes through which students will gain an in-depth understanding of the mechanism that drives trading in securities markets. The book also contains another set of lecture notes with more advanced, research-based material, suitable for Honours or Master level research students, or for PhD candidates. The material is self-explanatory and can also be used for self-study, preferably in conjunction with assigned readings.

Essays on Market Microstructure

Essays on Market Microstructure
Author: Yoichi Otsubo
Publisher:
Total Pages: 85
Release: 2011
Genre: Emissions trading
ISBN:

The first essay analyzes the market microstructure of the European Climate Exchange (ECX), the largest European Union Emissions Trading Scheme trading venue. Spreads range from 2 to 6 times the minimum tick increment on European Union Allowances (EUA) futures. Market impact estimates imply that an average trade will move the EUA market by 1.08 euro centimes. Information shares imply that approximately 90% of price discovery is taking place in the ECX futures market. We find imbalances in the order book help predict returns for up to three days. A simple trading strategy that enters the market long or short when the order imbalance is strong is profitable even after accounting for spreads and market impact. The second essay provides a case that the Thompson-Waller (TW) estimator would have downward bias, which has not been carefully discussed in the literature. Such case is that (i) the buy (sell) order tends to follow buy (sell) order and (ii) the price changes associated to such orders are small. The upward bias of the TW estimator would be canceled out by the downward bias, and in such case the estimator would perform better than the other absolute price change methods. The application to the EUA futures contract trading implies that its trading pattern and the price change provide the conditions that reduce the bias of the TW estimator. The Madhavan, Richardson and Roomans model is applied to examine the spread component of the market. A dominance of asymmetric information component in the spread is found. The fraction of the spread attributable to that component increases gradually during the observation period. The final essay examines price discovery of Japanese companies' Tokyo-New York cross-listed shares. Kalman filter is utilized to estimate partial price adjustment model. By employing Kalman filter, the present research can deal with missing values problem researchers has to confront in order to analyze non-overlapping markets such as Tokyo and New York. I find that events with larger magnitude of efficient price change occur during Tokyo opening hours. Dynamic measure shows that New York Stock Exchange is more efficient in price discovery.

Hide-and-Seek in the Market

Hide-and-Seek in the Market
Author: Rudy De Winne
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper investigates why traders hide their orders and how other traders respond to the detection of hidden depth. Using a logit model, we provide empirical findings suggesting that traders use hidden orders to manage both exposure risk and picking off risk. Using probit models, we show that the detection of hidden depth increases order aggressiveness. Our interpretation of this empirical evidence is threefold. First, hidden depth detection is possible and frequent. Second, when traders detect hidden volume at the best opposite quote, they strategically adjust their order submission to seize the opportunity for depth improvement. Third, traders' response when hidden depth is discovered suggests either that they do not associate hidden orders with informed trading or that the risk of trading with an informed trader is widely offset by the opportunity for depth improvement.