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Modern equity markets have both fast traders such as dealers, market makers, and high frequency traders and slow traders such as retail clients. We model and show empirically that latency differences allow fast liquidity suppliers to pick off slow liquidity demanders at prices inferior to the...
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We investigate the information content of the limit order book (LOB) on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the world's second largest order-driven market. We find that high frequency microstructure parameters, such as the current cost-to-trade 1% of average daily volume and LOB slope, contain information...
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We analyze and compare the information quality of order flows on the exchange and on off-exchange venues reported to Trade Reporting Facilities. Compared to exchange order flow, we find that off-exchange order flow has significantly lower information quality, including a lower information ratio...
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It is found that insiders are more likely to trade on high volume days, which indicates an effort to hide their trades. Further, insider trading raises the number of days with abnormally high trading volume only slightly, again indicating that insiders are avoiding attracting attention. No...
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We investigate competition between traditional stock exchanges and new ‘dark' trading venues using an important difference in regulatory treatment. SEC required minimum pricing increments constrain some stock spreads, causing large limit order queues. Dark pools allow some traders to by-pass...
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