Abstract:
In this paper we investigate the price effects of trading intensity. Extending on the
Madhavan et al. (1997) model, we split the intensity effect into liquidity and
information effects. We provide a measure of market quality that is the ratio of the
covariance bias to the variance bias. Analyzing about 6 years of tick by tick data, we
find that the bid-ask spread in a pure limit order book market contains a risk
component associated with managing the time to trade, and this component accounts
for roughly 19.6% of the implied bid-ask spread. Extending our model to investigate
intraday patterns, we find that the adverse selection cost exhibits a U-shaped pattern
reflecting uncertainty at market openings in the Helsinki Stock Exchange (HEX) and
in the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). The results emphasize the importance of
managing time in limit order book markets.
Citation:
Sita, B., & Westerholm, J. (2006, June). The role of time in price discovery: Ultra-high frequency trading in a limit order book market. In Financial Management Association (FMA) European Conference. Stockholm, Sweden (pp. 8-9).