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The “make or take” decision in an electronic market: Evidence on the evolution of liquidity Journal of Financial Economics 75, 2005 Robert Bloomfield,

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Presentation on theme: "The “make or take” decision in an electronic market: Evidence on the evolution of liquidity Journal of Financial Economics 75, 2005 Robert Bloomfield,"— Presentation transcript:

1 The “make or take” decision in an electronic market: Evidence on the evolution of liquidity Journal of Financial Economics 75, 2005 Robert Bloomfield, Maureen O’hara, Gideon Sarr Presented by Doug Chung

2 Introduction ►Increased presence of electronic markets world wide ►Many electronic markets are organized as limit order books  No designated liquidity providers (market makers, dealers) ►Questions addressed  How do informed/liquidity traders differ in provision/use of liquidity?  How do characteristics of market affect these strategies?  How do characteristics of the underlying asset affect provision of market liquidity? ►Results  Informed traders take as well as make liquidity  When value of private info is high the informed trade via market orders  When value of private info is low the informed trade via limit orders  Unlike previous models the informed profit further as liquidity providers and earn the spread

3 Introduction ►Trader types  Informed traders: trade with their information to gain profit  Liquidity traders: trade based on their liquidity needs ►Order type  Limit order: provides liquidity  Market order: takes liquidity

4 Experimental design ►Definition  Cohort: group of six traders who always trade together  Security: claim of terminal dividend identified by the value and liquidity needs  Market: time interval of which trade is possible for a specific security  Only one security is traded in each market  Session: 75min period where traders trade in a series of markets  Each cohort trades 20 securities sequentially in a session

5 Experimental design ►Basic design  8 Cohorts: 48 participants  To manipulate information: informed(2), liquidity(4)  To manipulate volatility: high (uniform dist), low (bell shape dist)  To manipulate extremity: high (more than $15 from expected value) low (less than $7 from expected value)  To manipulate elapsed time: 15 second intervals for 120 seconds

6 Experimental design ►Trading Periods  Pre-trading: 30 seconds, enter orders  Main trading: 120 seconds, trades ►Trader types  Two informed traders – given true value of the security  Four liquidity traders  Target to sell 20  Target to buy 20  Target to sell 5  Target to buy 5 ►Subjects  MBA students – Johnson School of Management at Cornell university

7 Results ►Summary statistics of market wide measures Markets behave very well

8 Results ►Summary statistics of traders’ strategies Informed submitted more limit orders – contrary to previous theory Small traders trade  3 their desired amount – consistent with Odean (1999), Barber and Odean (2000) U shape trading pattern

9 Results ►Market vs. limit orders: the influence of time, volatility, extremity submission rate = # limit orders / # limit and market orders Taking rate = % trades completed by market orders

10 Results ►The role of time  Liquidity traders: use of limit orders decline with time – consistent with Harris (1998)  Informed traders: use of limit orders increase with time (provide liquidity) – inconsistent with previous theoretical models

11 Results ►Volatility and extremity Informed traders behave differently when the realized value is extreme – Use more market orders and less limit orders Informed traders benefit from liquidity traders

12 Results ►Trading strategies: behaviors of informed & liquidity traders Informed traders use less limit orders and more market orders when information is valuable Less demand for immediacy after target is achieved Remaining targetValue of information Informed has lower SR and higher TR when info is valuable

13 Results ►Trading losses and trading strategies: a benchmark analysis

14 Results ►Trading strategies and the state of the book Liquidity supply role Consistent with Parlour (1998)’s model that traders would use less (more) limit orders as book depth on the same side (other side) increases Unlikely to use limit order due to order priority SR increases as depth on the other side increases

15 Conclusion ►Analysis of the evolution of liquidity in an electronic limit order market ►Large Liquidity traders prefer limit orders in the beginning but preference shift towards using more of market orders  Consistent with predictions of previous theoretical models ►Informed traders employ market orders in the beginning but over time shift to trading mostly limit orders  Another source of profit: the spread by providing liquidity  Inconsistent with predictions of previous theoretical models ►Explains why electronic markets can endogenously create liquidity even in the presence of information asymmetry

16 Thank You


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