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We perform an empirical investigation of 'market impact' of trades using a large dataset of transactions executed by institutional investors in the US equity market. We find that price variations during trade execution are mainly driven by the aggregate order flow imbalance rather than the...
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We propose a model for the dynamics of a limit order book in a liquid market where buy and sell orders are submitted at high frequency. We derive a functional central limit theorem for the joint dynamics of the bid and ask queues and show that, when the frequency of order arrivals is large, the...
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To execute a trade, participants in electronic equity markets may choose to submit limit orders or market orders across various exchanges where a stock is traded. This decision is influenced by the characteristics of the order flow and queue sizes in each limit order book, as well as the...
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Time series of financial asset returns often exhibit the volatility clustering property: large changes in prices tend to cluster together, resulting in persistence of the amplitudes of price changes. After recalling various methods for quantifying and modeling this phenomenon, we discuss several...
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Orders in major electronic stock markets are executed through centralised limit order books (LOBs). The availability of historical data have led to extensive research modelling LOBs. Better understanding the dynamics of LOBs and building simulators as a framework for controlled experiments, when...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013298835