Empirical Market Microstructure: The Institutions, Economics, and Econometrics of Securities Trading

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2007-01-04
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

The interactions that occur in securities markets are among the fastest, most information-intensive, and most highly strategic of all economic phenomena. Empirical Market Microstructure is about the institutions that have evolved to handle our trading needs, the economic forces that guide ourstrategies, and statistical methods of using and interpreting the vast amount of information that these markets produce. The empirical methods discussed in the book draw on the power of multivariate linear time series analysis. The book discusses the application of univariate ARMA analysis to trade prices, vector autoregressions to price and order data, and vector error correction models to situations where the samesecurity is traded in many markets. In these models, the tools of random-walk decomposition and co-integration emerge as important to specification and interpretation. The statistical specifications dont simply arise, however, as progressively more refined descriptive models; they have strong economic underpinnings arising from asymmetric information, inventory control, and the strategies of their participants. These topics are discusssed, interleaving with andemphasizing the connection to the statistical models. From a practical viewpoint, many of these models will be estimated to calibrate real-world trading strategies. Some market participants will be trying to discern strategies that generate profits from short-term trading. A much greater number, though, will be trying to accomplish trades that helpdiversify, hedge or reallocate a portfolio. Trading is not, for these agents, their primary economic purpose. They are simply trying to satisfy their trading needs at a minimal cost. The final part of the book discusses how these costs are measured, and strategies to minimize them--both by splittingorders over time, and by the judicious use of limit orders. The book includes numerous exercises; solutions and other supporting materials are available on the author's web site.

Author Biography


Joel Hasbrouck is the Kenneth G. Langone Professor of Business Administration and Professor of Finance at the Stern School of Business, New York University. In addition to teaching at Stern, he has served as a constultant to the New York Stock Exchange and the American Stock Exchange, and on the scientific adviosry board of ITG, Inc. and Nasdaq's economic advisory board.

Table of Contents

Introduction
3(6)
Trading Mechanisms
9(14)
The Roll Model of Trade Prices
23(8)
Univariate Time-Series Analysis
31(11)
Sequential Trade Models
42(14)
Order Flow and the Probability of Informed Trading
56(5)
Strategic Trade Models
61(6)
A Generalized Roll Model
67(11)
Multivariate Linear Microstructure Models
78(16)
Multiple Securities and Multiple Prices
94(12)
Dealers and Their Inventories
106(12)
Limit Order Markets
118(13)
Depth
131(12)
Trading Costs: Retrospective and Comparative
143(10)
Prospective Trading Costs and Execution Strategies
153(13)
Appendix: U.S. Equity Markets 166(13)
Notes 179(4)
References 183(13)
Index 196

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