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Liquidity and Market Efficiency

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Secular decrease in bid-ask spreads across the three tick regimes ... The effect is present in every tick regime. Market efficiency by time of day ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Liquidity and Market Efficiency


1
Liquidity and Market Efficiency
  • Tarun Chordia (Emory)
  • Richard Roll (UCLA)
  • A. Subrahmanyam (UCLA)

2
Market Efficiency
  • Cannot be instantaneous
  • CRS (2005) shows that order flows do predict very
    short-term returns
  • Efficiency is created in part by arbitrageurs,
    who are subject to transaction costs
  • What is the empirical relation between liquidity
    and market efficiency?

3
Liquidity
  • Has generally been related to broader finance by
    way of a premium in asset returns (Amihud and
    Mendelson, 1986)
  • Also may play a role in moving prices to
    efficient outcomesthis is what we investigate

4
Efficiency over time
  • Secular decrease in bid-ask spreads across the
    three tick regimes
  • How did this affect efficiency?
  • How does efficiency vary within the day?

5
Interday efficiency measures
  • Open-close and close-open variance ratios (viz.
    French and Roll, 1984)
  • Daily return autocorrelations
  • How have these varied across the three tick size
    regimes corresponding to increased liquidity?

6
Theoretical setting
  • A security is traded at dates 1 and 2 and pays
    off ?? at date 3 (variances v? and v?).
  • A demand of z2 arrives at period 2.
  • In addition, a fraction kz1 arrives at period 1
    and (1-k)z1 at period 2 where 0ltklt1.
  • Variances of z1 and z2 both equal vz.

7
Equilibrium
  • Market makers with CARA utility and risk aversion
    ? absorb order flows
  • The mass of market makers at dates 1 and 2 is M
    and N, with NgtM
  • Equilibrium is of the Walrasian type
  • Let Pi and Qi be the price and order imbalance at
    date i, respectively

8
Return Predictability
9
Central results
  • If the mass of market makers at date 2 is
    sufficiently large, lagged imbalances positively
    predict future returns
  • If markets are very liquid (market makers risk
    bearing capacity is very high), such
    predictability disappears.

10
Data
  • Comprehensive sample of NYSE stocks that traded
    every day
  • We construct five minute returns for portfolio
    based on mid-quote returns
  • If a stock did not trade in period t, it is
    excluded from the t-1 portfolio
  • Liquidity proxy is the effective spread, averaged
    across the trading day

11
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12
Decline in return predictability
  • R2 goes to more than 10 to virtually zero
  • T-statistic also drops from around 12 to about
    1-2
  • The pattern in imbalance autocorrelations (which
    are 0.28, 0.21, 0.21, respectively, across the
    eighth, sixteenth, and decimal regimes) is not
    sufficient to directly cause this decrease.

13
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14
Illiquid periods
  • Defined as days where the de-trended effective
    spread is more than one standard deviation above
    its mean within each tick size regime
  • We use an indicator variable, ILD, which is one
    on illiquid days

15
Regressions using illiquidity indicator ILD
(dependent variable is mid-quote returns at time
t)
16
Liquidity and predictability
  • The predictability of returns from lagged order
    flows is greater on more illiquid days
  • The effect is present in every tick regime

17
Market efficiency by time of day
  • Since spreads vary by time of day (McInish and
    Wood, 1992), there is reason to expect a similar
    pattern in return predictability
  • We define two dummies, morn (930-12), and eve
    (1400-1600)

18
Time-of-day effects
19
Intraday efficiency results
  • The markets ability to accommodate order flows
    was smaller during the morning and, to a lesser
    extent, the evening period within the eighth
    regime
  • This effect has declined considerably during the
    decimal period

20
Interday measures of efficiency
  • We consider open-close and close-open variance
    ratios, and return autocorrelations
  • French and Roll (1984) show that these are
    statistically greater than unity
  • They show that this phenomenon is not due to
    greater public information flows (by analyzing
    business day closures) and argue that it may be
    due to microstructure effects, mispricing, or
    private information trading
  • How do these quantities change across the three
    tick regimes?

21
Daily variance ratios and autocorrelations
22
Interpretation
  • The evidence is that variance ratios have
    increased but autocorrelations appear to have
    declined
  • We use mid-quote returns, so bid-ask bounce is
    not an issue
  • If mispricing were driving the increase in
    variance ratios across time, autocorrelations
    should have increased as the tick size decreased
    but there is no evidence of this.
  • Consequently, the evidence is consistent with
    private information being more effectively
    incorporated into prices in the lower tick
    regimes, especially for smaller firms.

23
Conclusions
  • The extent of return predictability from order
    flows (an inverse measure of market efficiency)
    has decreased over time and also is higher on
    illiquid days.
  • Variation in efficiency by time of day has
    diminished following decimalization
  • Variance ratios have increased whereas
    autocorrelations have decreased in recent years,
    suggesting an increase in private information
    being incorporated into prices following
    decimalization.
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