30 results on '"g18"'
Search Results
2. Does local political support influence financial markets? A study on the impact of job approval ratings of political representatives on local stock returns.
- Author
-
Joo, Sunghoon, Kim, Dong H., and Park, Jung Chul
- Subjects
PUBLIC opinion ,JOB evaluation ,FINANCIAL markets ,POWER (Social sciences) ,INFLUENCER marketing - Abstract
Using data on job approval ratings of governors, U.S. senators, and the president, we find that firms located in states with high approval ratings outperform firms located in states with low approval ratings by.64% per month. Furthermore, this relationship is stronger when investors are actively involved in politics, when local politicians are closer to the center of political power, for small firms that have a larger proportion of local investors, and for financially strong areas where investors are ready to execute investments in local stocks. Overall, our study shows that investors' political sentiment is important in determining stock returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Increasing the Tick: Examining the Impact of the Tick Size Change on Maker‐Taker and Taker‐Maker Market Models.
- Author
-
Cox, Justin, Ness, Bonnie, and Ness, Robert
- Subjects
MARKETING models ,TICKS ,STOCK exchanges ,INFLUENCER marketing ,SIZE - Abstract
We investigate the effects of an increase in tick size on order and trading flow across market fee models. Using the pilot firms in the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Tick Size Pilot Program, we document that trade and order volume declines on maker‐taker fee models after the tick size implementation. We find that the inverted fee models (taker‐maker) experience an increase in both trade and order volume. Additionally, we find that a tick size adjustment has a substantial influence on market participation in maker‐taker fee models. We also find that measures of both hidden and algorithmic trading decline with an increasing tick size, which is strongly moderated by the differences in the maker‐taker and taker‐maker fee models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Trading on Private Information: Evidence from Members of Congress.
- Author
-
Karadas, Serkan
- Subjects
UNITED States legislators ,SECURITIES trading ,INSIDER trading in securities ,PORTFOLIO management (Investments) ,REPUBLICAN attitudes - Abstract
I examine the stock trades of members of Congress and find that over 2004–2010 the buy‐minus‐sell portfolios of powerful Republicans have the highest abnormal returns, exceeding 35% on an annual basis under a one‐week holding period. Among powerful Republicans, the abnormal returns are mostly concentrated in the portfolios of those with less trading experience. I also find that the positive abnormal returns disappear after the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act was passed in 2012. My results imply that the STOCK Act affected politicians' incentives to trade on private information, which they acquired through their power and party membership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Municipal Disclosure Timeliness and the Cost of Debt.
- Author
-
Sherrill, D. Eli and Yerkes, Rustin T.
- Subjects
MUNICIPAL bonds ,INVESTORS ,FINANCIAL disclosure ,FINANCIAL statements ,BOND market - Abstract
Abstract: A longstanding concern for municipal bond investors is the lack of timely financial statement disclosures. Municipalities are held to lower disclosure standards than corporations. Using continuing disclosure dates for audited financial statements, we find bond issuers with slower disclosure have higher secondary market yields and spreads, less frequent secondary market trading, and are less likely to issue new bonds. We observe that future disclosure is largely predictable based on past disclosure and that disclosure often improves prior to new bond issuances. When municipalities do not capitalize on the benefits of timely disclosure, economic consequences are imposed on bondholders and taxpayers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Short Sale Constraints and Single Stock Futures Introductions.
- Author
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Gagnon, Louis
- Subjects
STOCKS (Finance) ,DERIVATIVE securities ,SHORT selling (Securities) ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
Abstract: This paper exploits the unique experimental setting created by nearly 1,300 new single stock futures listings on the OneChicago exchange between 2003 and 2009. I investigate the impact of derivatives introductions on the tightness of short sale constraints facing their underlying assets. After controlling explicitly for supply and demand conditions in the stock lending market, this experiment reveals a precipitous decline in active utilization rates and loan fees in the lending market, after the futures introductions. The paper provides strong evidence that supports the view that derivatives represent a viable alternate synthetic short selling venue relaxing short sale constraints facing their underlying assets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Passive Institutional Ownership, R2 Trends, and Price Informativeness.
- Author
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DeLisle, R. Jared, French, Dan W., and Schutte, Maria Gabriela
- Subjects
FINANCIAL institution management ,SECURITIES trading ,CAPITAL market ,SECURITIES trading volume ,VOLATILITY (Securities) ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
A distinctive trend in the capital markets over the past two decades is the rise in equity ownership of passive financial institutions. We propose that this rise has a negative effect on price informativeness. By not trading around firm-specific news, passive investors reduce the firm-specific component of total volatility and increase stock correlations. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that the growth in passive institutional ownership is robustly associated with the growth in market model R
2 s of individual stocks since the early 1990s. Additionally, we find a negative relation between passive ownership and earnings predictability, an informativeness proxy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Foreign Institutional Investment, Ownership, and Liquidity: Real and Informational Frictions.
- Author
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Ding, Mingfa, Nilsson, Birger, and Suardi, Sandy
- Subjects
LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,FOREIGN ownership of business enterprises ,FOREIGN investments ,STOCK exchanges ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 - Abstract
The literature widely documents the negative liquidity impact of foreign participation in firms that permit high foreign institutional ownership. This paper employs a unique setting for the limited participation of qualified foreign institutional investors (QFIIs) in China's A-share market and examines how this impacts on stock liquidity in emerging markets. Contrary to the findings in the literature, foreign investor participation helps enhance the liquidity of affected stocks by promoting trade activities and price discovery. The improvement in liquidity does not occur through the information friction channel, but rather the real friction channel. Our results are robust to endogeneity issue and the possible influence of the global financial crisis, industry effects and the stock exchange. Further, the liquidity improving effects of QFII are even stronger when the analysis is performed on a subsample of QFII firms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Front-Running Scalping Strategies and Market Manipulation: Why Does High-Frequency Trading Need Stricter Regulation?
- Author
-
Manahov*, Viktor
- Subjects
MARKET manipulation ,STRATEGIC planning ,SECURITIES trading ,INVESTORS ,AUCTIONS - Abstract
Regulators continue to debate whether high-frequency trading (HFT) is beneficial to market quality. Using Strongly Typed Genetic Programming (STGP) trading algorithm, we develop several artificial stock markets populated with HFT scalpers and strategic informed traders. We simulate real-life trading in the millisecond time frame by applying STGP to real-time and historical data from Apple, Exxon Mobil, and Google. We observe that HFT scalpers front-run the order flow, resulting in damage to market quality and long-term investors. To mitigate these negative implications, we propose batch auctions every 30 milliseconds of trading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. How Informative Is Floating NAV When Securities Trade Infrequently?
- Author
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Allen, Kyle D., Cashman, George D., and Winters, Drew B.
- Subjects
NET Asset Value ,INVESTMENT management ,MARKET prices ,INCOME funds ,MARKET pricing - Abstract
We examine if a floating net asset value (NAV) increases the transparency of risk for investors. Using closed-income fixed income funds we find little evidence that a floating NAV helps investors better understand the value and risk of a fund when a fund's assets trade infrequently. This potentially informs the debate regarding the adoption of a floating NAV in the money market industry. Our results suggest that it is unlikely that the benefits of floating NAV will outweigh the costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Fails-to-Deliver before and after the Implementation of Rule 203 and Rule 204.
- Author
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Jain, Archana and Jain*, Chinmay
- Subjects
SHORT selling (Securities) ,HEDGING (Finance) ,SPREAD (Finance) ,BUSINESS turnover ,FINANCIAL performance - Abstract
We study the determinants of fails-to-deliver in the period before and after the implementation of Rule 203 (elimination of option market maker exception from the locate and close-out requirement) and Rule 204 ( t+3 close-out rule) in September 2008. We find a positive relation between short selling and fails-to-deliver that weakens after the implementation of these rules. Fails-to-deliver are higher for stocks with low institutional ownership, low book-to-market, small market capitalization, high turnover, and put option availability. The relation between short selling and these measures of borrowing costs is also weaker after the implementation of these rules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Circuit Breakers, Trading Collars, and Volatility Transmission Across Markets: Evidence from NYSE Rule 80A.
- Author
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Goldstein, Michael A.
- Subjects
PROPERTY tax relief ,MARKET volatility ,FINANCIAL markets ,STOCK index futures ,PROGRAM trading (Securities) - Abstract
The NYSE's Rule 80A attempted to delink the futures and equity markets by limiting index arbitrage trades in the same direction as the last trade to reduce stock market volatility. Rule 80A leads to a small but statistically significant decline in intraday U.S. equity market volatility. In addition, the results are asymmetric: volatility is dampened more in a rising market than in a declining one. These results suggest that, to a limited extent, rule restrictions on trading can sufficiently delink the futures and equity markets enough to reduce the transmission of volatility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Declining Role of NASDAQ Market Makers.
- Author
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Egginton, Jared
- Subjects
DATA processing in stock exchanges ,INDUSTRIAL organization (Economic theory) ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) - Abstract
We compare the liquidity providing behavior of NASDAQ market makers in 2010 to their behavior in 2004. We examine how frequently market makers are at the inside quote, what market and stock specific factors influence market makers' behavior, and the relation between market maker participation and intraday bid-ask spread patterns. We observe a decrease in the percent of the trading day dealers' quote at the inside, a decline in the number of market makers, and a decrease in the influence market makers have on intraday spread patterns. The results suggest that the role of NASDAQ market makers declines over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Exit, Survival, and Competitive Equilibrium in Dealer Markets.
- Author
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Chung, Kee H. and Chuwonganant, Chairat
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL organization (Economic theory) ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business ,MARKET share ,PROFITABILITY - Abstract
In this study we analyze dealer exit, survival, and competitive equilibrium in the NASDAQ Stock Market using data from a unique period that entails major changes in regulatory and competitive environments. We decompose the forces that affect dealer survival into market factors and dealer attributes. Market factors encompass those variables that affect the demand for and profitability of dealer services as a whole. Variation in survival probability across dealers results mainly from their competitive advantages in business strategies, information, quote aggressiveness, access to order flow, and economies of scale. On the whole, our results suggest that dealer markets exhibit a Darwinian survival of the fittest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The Flash Crash: Trading Aggressiveness, Liquidity Supply, and the Impact of Intermarket Sweep Orders.
- Author
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McInish, Tom, Upson, James, and Wood, Robert A.
- Subjects
DOW Jones industrial average ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
During the Flash Crash on May 6, 2010, a short period of high stock market volatility, some stock prices declined to $0.01, while others increased to $100,000. Examining Intermarket Sweep Orders (ISOs) before, on, and after May 6, we find that ISO use is substantially higher on May 6. For those stocks whose prices fell the most, over 65% of the sell volume comes from ISOs. During the price recovery period for these stocks, about 53% of the buy volume comes from ISOs. We believe that the unusual behavior of ISOs contributed to the sudden drop and recovery of the market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. How Aggressive Are High-Frequency Traders?
- Author
-
Hagströmer, Björn, Nordén, Lars, and Zhang, Dong
- Subjects
HIGH-frequency trading (Securities) ,MARKETING ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,MARKETPLACES ,MARKET prices - Abstract
We study order aggressiveness of market-making high-frequency traders (MM-HFTs), opportunistic HFTs (Opp-HFTs), and non-HFTs. We find that MM-HFTs follow their own group's previous order submissions more than they follow other traders' orders. Opp-HFTs and non-HFTs tend to split market orders into small portions submitted in sequence. HFTs submit more (less) aggressive orders when the same-side (opposite-side) depth is large, and supply liquidity when the bid-ask spread is wide. Thus, HFTs adhere strongly to the tradeoff between waiting cost and the cost of immediate execution. Non-HFTs care less about this tradeoff, but react somewhat stronger than HFTs to volatility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Sound of Silence.
- Author
-
Harris, Jeffrey H. and Saad, Mohsen
- Subjects
EMAIL systems ,TIME series analysis ,HIGH-frequency trading (Securities) ,STOCK exchanges ,MARKETPLACES ,FINANCE - Abstract
Using comprehensive electronic data collected directly from NASDAQ systems, we assess the impact of changes in electronic message traffic on predicting short-term changes in prices, spreads and quoted depth levels. We document evidence that message traffic at, and nearby, the inside quotes predicts upcoming price and quoted depth changes as much as 75 seconds in advance. Controlling for the time series properties of silent information, past price, volume, electronic communication network volume, time-of-day, and firm-specific fixed effects, we find that message traffic is strongly related to short-term returns. Our results demonstrate that modern electronic trading systems can be employed by high-frequency traders to effectively forecast short-term market conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Computerized and High-Frequency Trading.
- Author
-
Goldstein, Michael A., Kumar, Pavitra, and Graves, Frank C.
- Subjects
HIGH-frequency trading (Securities) ,COMPUTERS ,ALGORITHMS ,PROFITABILITY ,MARKETPLACES ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
The use of computers to execute trades, often with very low latency, has increased over time, resulting in a variety of computer algorithms executing electronically targeted trading strategies at high speed. We describe the evolution of increasingly fast automated trading over the past decade and some key features of its associated practices, strategies, and apparent profitability. We also survey and contrast several studies on the impacts of such high-speed trading on the performance of securities markets. Finally, we examine some of the regulatory questions surrounding the need, if any, for safeguards over the fairness and risks of high-speed, computerized trading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. When Is a Treasury Security On-the-Run?
- Author
-
Moore, Mark E. and Winters, Drew B.
- Subjects
TREASURY management systems ,SECURITIES trading ,AUCTIONS ,EMPIRICAL research ,GROUP of Ten countries - Abstract
The literature contains two conflicting definitions of the on-the-run period for Treasury securities. We address the conflict by empirically examining the implications of the two definitions. We conclude that it is important that researchers clearly understand the implications of each definition. Our results suggest that on-the-run activity spans different auction calendar time in T-notes and T-bills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Underwriter Compensation Structure: Can It Really Bond Underwriters?
- Author
-
Garner, Jacqueline L. and Marshall, Beverly B.
- Subjects
INSURANCE underwriters ,GOING public (Securities) ,EXECUTIVE compensation ,PERFORMANCE evaluation ,CASH management - Abstract
Underwriter compensation can be structured as all cash or a combination of cash and warrants. Using a sample of small initial public offerings (IPOs), we find that underwriter compensation contracts that include warrants in exchange for cash can serve as certification for IPO firms by substituting for reputation capital. When underwriters accept warrants when they could have received more cash compensation, the IPOs avoid the well documented long-run underperformance. However, when underwriters receive warrants after maximizing cash compensation, the IPO experiences higher underpricing and poorer long-run performance. The findings are consistent with a motivation by the underwriters to circumvent regulatory constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Do Criminal Sanctions Deter Insider Trading?
- Author
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Frijns, Bart, Gilbert, Aaron, and Tourani‐Rad, Alireza
- Subjects
SECURITIES fraud ,SECURITIES violations ,INSIDER trading in securities ,SECURITIES trading ,INTERNATIONAL sanctions - Abstract
Many developed markets have taken what appears to be a tough stance on illegal insider trading through the use of criminal sanctions. Although criminal sanctions represent a much greater penalty than civil sanctions, the higher burden of proof required makes their enforceability weaker. This trade off between severity and enforceability makes the impact of criminal sanctions ambiguous. We empirically examine this issue by studying the deterrence of insider trading following the introduction of criminal sanctions in a developed market. Significant changes in sanction regimes are rare, especially when criminal sanctions are introduced without other changes. In February 2008, New Zealand introduced criminal sanctions for insider trading. This change of law offers a unique setting in which to examine the deterrence effect of criminalization. Using measures for the cost of trading, degree of information asymmetry, and probability of informed trading, we find that the enactment of this law led to a worsening in these measures. These findings suggest that the weaker enforceability of criminalization outweighs the associated increased severity of the penalties in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Does Regulation Fair Disclosure Reduce the Information Quality of Managerial Guidance?
- Author
-
Agapova, Anna, Madura, Jeff, and Mailibayeva, Zhanel
- Subjects
FINANCIAL disclosure ,PUBLIC administration ,GUIDANCE Information System (Information retrieval system) ,BUSINESS enterprises ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,BUSINESS announcements - Abstract
We examine an effect of Regulation Fair Disclosure (Reg FD) on voluntary public managerial guidance information quality. Results suggest that the information quality of public guidance has not deteriorated after Reg FD. We also examine separately the effect of Reg FD on information efficiency before earnings releases for firms that provide public managerial guidance and those that do not. We find that when we control for the impact of Reg FD on firm characteristics, information efficiency deteriorates for firms that do not provide public guidance and for new guiders, while it does not change for firms that continue issuing public guidance after Reg FD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Anonymity, Stealth Trading, and the Information Content of Broker Identity.
- Author
-
Frino, Alex, Johnstone, David, and Hui Zheng
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,STOCKBROKERS ,INVESTORS ,FLOOR traders (Finance) ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
This paper examines whether the identity of a broker involved in transactions contains information. Using a sample of transactions from the Australian Stock Exchange—where broker identity is transparent—we provide evidence that consecutive buyer-/seller-initiated transactions by the same broker have a relatively high permanent price impact. This implies that broker identity conveys information to market participants, and that markets in which broker identity is disclosed are likely to be more efficient. We also find that medium-sized trades by the same broker convey greater information than large and small trades, which is consistent with stealth trading by informed investors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Preferenced Trading, Quote Competition, and Market Quality: Evidence from Decimalization on the NYSE.
- Author
-
Wei Huang, Rhee, S. Ghon, and Tang, Ning
- Subjects
ECONOMIC competition ,STOCK prices ,STOCK exchanges ,PRICES of securities - Abstract
We examine the impact of decimalization on preferenced trading in NYSE-listed stocks and show a significant decline in preferenced trading around decimalization. For the largest NYSE stocks, the total decline is nearly 22%. We also find a negative correlation between the changes in preferenced trading and the changes in quote competition intensity, and a positive correlation between the changes in preferenced trading and the changes in spreads. Consistent with the cream skimming hypothesis, we find that abnormal changes in information asymmetry cost for NYSE trades are positively correlated with the changes in preferenced trading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Political Risk and Purchases of Privatized State-Owned Enterprises.
- Author
-
Glambosky, Mina C., Gleason, Kimberly C., and Madura, Jeff
- Subjects
VALUATION ,BUSINESS enterprises ,PURCHASING ,CAPITAL ,RISK management in business - Abstract
We assess the valuation effects and risk for acquirers of privatized state-owned enterprises (SOEs). The valuation effects of purchasers are positive and significant; they increase for purchasers that have recent high performance, better access to capital, and have engaged in larger acquisitions. The acquirer valuation effects are lower when the selling government is more corrupt, more bureaucratic, and a weaker financial performer. Acquirer's total and unsystematic risk increases, indicating that purchasers of SOEs realize diversification benefits. Systematic risk increases for purchasers when the government is characterized by high political risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Changes in the Information Efficiency of Stock Prices: Additional Evidence.
- Author
-
DeFusco, Richard A., Mishra, Suchi, and Raghunandan, K.
- Subjects
STOCK prices ,PRICES of securities ,DISCLOSURE ,PRICES - Abstract
Previous research shows, using data from three quarters after the implementation of regulation fair disclosure (Reg FD), that there is an improvement in the informational efficiency of stock prices after Reg FD. We compare the informational efficiency of stock prices in four pre-Reg FD quarters (1999–2000) and 12 post-Reg FD quarters (2002–2005). The improvement in the informational efficiency of stock prices previously reported in the immediate aftermath of Reg FD persists in later periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Pricing of IPOs Post-Sarbanes-Oxley.
- Author
-
Johnston, Jarrod and Madura, Jeff
- Subjects
UNITED States. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 ,GOING public (Securities) ,ORGANIZATIONAL transparency ,AFTERMARKETS ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) imposes new requirements for firms going public. Many provisions of SOX should improve the transparency of U.S. firms going public and therefore reduce the uncertainty surrounding their valuation. We find that initial returns of initial public offerings (IPOs) in the United States have declined since SOX. Furthermore, the aftermarket performance of IPOs since SOX is significantly higher. While the expense of public reporting has increased in the United States because of SOX, the valuations of newly public firms at the time of the IPO are subject to less uncertainty and smaller aftermarket corrections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Short- and Long-Term Effects of Multimarket Trading.
- Author
-
Nguyen, Vanthuan, Van Ness, Bonnie F., and Van Ness, Robert A.
- Subjects
FINANCIAL markets ,EXCHANGE traded funds ,ECONOMIC competition ,PRICES ,MARKET volatility ,MONEY market - Abstract
We analyze short- and long-term effects of multimarket trading by examining the entries of multiple markets into transacting three ETFs, DIA, QQQ, and SPY. We find that large-scale entries improve overall market quality, while small-scale entries have ambiguous effects. Our results show that the competition effect dominates the fragmentation effect over a long horizon and that market fragmentation leads to a decline in trading costs. Further, we find that the order handling rules help mitigate the fragmentation effect and facilitate the competition effect. We do not find that multimarket trading harms price efficiency or increases price volatility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Are the Insider Trades of a Large Institutional Investor Informed?
- Author
-
Golec, Joseph
- Subjects
INSIDER trading in securities ,SECURITIES trading ,STOCK price indexes ,RATE of return on stocks ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
We use a unique data set to consider whether a large institution's (Fidelity funds) insider trades are informed. Theoretical studies of large informed traders suggest that their information advantage could be greater for buy trades than sell trades, be short- or long-lived, and be exploited by varying the pace of trade execution. Although there is evidence of each of these, Fidelity seems to be informed only for quickly executed buy trades. Other trades outperform a stock market index but not a four-factor return model. This performance profile is consistent with Fidelity's fees, which depend on performance compared to an index. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Nasdaq Trading and Trading Costs: 1993–2002.
- Author
-
Van Ness, Bonnie F., Van Ness, Robert A., and Warr, Richard S.
- Subjects
SECURITIES trading ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,INTEREST rates ,STOCKS (Finance) - Abstract
Nasdaq spreads decline from 1993 to 2002, largely independently of tick-size reductions. Trade size declines, consistent with greater retail investor activity. Using the method of Chordia, Roll, and Subrahmanyam (2001), we find that concurrent market returns strongly affect liquidity and trading activity. Liquidity exhibits distinct day-of-the-week patterns. There is little evidence that macroeconomic announcements or changes in key interest rates affect Nasdaq stocks overall; but in the bear market, we find a relation between some of these variables and effective spreads, which we interpret as consistent with Nasdaq participants' paying greater attention to fundamentals after the market crash. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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