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Speeding up the exchange does not necessarily improve liquidity. On the one hand, more speed enables a high-frequency market maker (HFM) to update his quotes faster on incoming news. This reduces his payoff risk and thus lowers the competitive bid-ask spread. On the other hand, HFM price quotes...
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We document low cross-sectional correlations between high-frequency market maker (MM) inventory positions, suggesting poor risk sharing. Using a unique data set on Canadian futures markets, a simple inventory cost estimate is 300% above the optimal benchmark. Our model explains how heterogeneity...
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Trading activity surges associated with latency arbitrage are costly, as they lead to both lower liquidity and inefficient investments in order processing capacity that remains idle 90% of the time. A congestion message fee on liquidity-taking orders alleviates both concerns. The fee surges...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012052601
Faster trading improves liquidity in periodic call auction markets, in contrast to continuous-timemarkets. We build a model where high-frequency traders (HFTs) engage in duels to trade onstale quotes. More frequent periodic auctions increase the likelihood that a single HFT arrives inany given...
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