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Many financial markets have recently become subject to new regulations requiring transparency. This paper studies how mandatory transparency affects trading in the corporate bond market. In July 2002, TRACE began requiring the public dissemination of post-trade price and volume information for...
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"This paper demonstrates that short sales are often misclassified as buyer-initiated by the Lee-Ready and other commonly used trade classification algorithms. This result is due in part to regulations which require short sales be executed on an uptick or zero-uptick. In addition, while the...
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Chakrabarty, Moulton and Shkilko (2012) claim that they redo Asquith, Oman, and Safaya (2010) and obtain different results. This note shows Chakrabarty, et al. (2012) only redid a portion of Asquith, et al. (2010) and their results for that portion are the same as Asquith, et al. (2010)....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013088297
In July 2002, FINRA began mandatory dissemination of price and volume information for corporate bond trades. This paper, using recently released data, measures transparency's effect on trading activity and costs for the entire corporate bond market. Even though trading costs decrease...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013076189
In July 2002, FINRA began mandatory dissemination of price and volume information for corporate bond trades. This paper, using recently released data, measures transparency's effect on trading activity and costs for the entire corporate bond market. Even though trading costs decrease...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012905219
This paper demonstrates that short sales are often misclassified as buyer-initiated by the Lee-Ready and other commonly used trade classification algorithms. This result is due in part to regulations which require short sales be executed on an uptick or zero-uptick. In addition, while the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012758604