Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 24th Apr 2024, 04:36:57am CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
MM 03: Market Microstructure: Competition
Time:
Thursday, 17/Aug/2023:
1:30pm - 3:00pm

Session Chair: Laurence Daures-Lescourret, ESSEC Business School
Location: 2A-24 (floor 2)


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Presentations
ID: 893

The Retail Execution Quality Landscape

Anne Dyhrberg1, Andriy Shkilko1, Ingrid Werner2

1Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada; 2Ohio State University, USA

Discussant: Carole Comerton-Forde (University of Melbourne)

Using a comprehensive multi-year U.S. dataset, we show that off-exchange (wholesaler) executions tend to benefit retail investors by separating their flow from the more toxic non-retail flow. Although the wholesale industry is concentrated, three findings suggest that wholesalers may not abuse market power. Firstly, brokers reward wholesalers who offer lower liquidity costs with more order flow. Secondly, the largest wholesalers offer the lowest costs, due to economies of scale. Finally, the entry of a new large wholesaler does not result in a reduction of liquidity costs.

EFA2023_893_MM 03_1_The Retail Execution Quality Landscape.pdf


ID: 926

Payment for Order Flow and Asset Choice

Thomas Ernst1, Chester Spatt2

1University of Maryland, United States of America; 2Carnegie Mellon University

Discussant: Anne Haubo Dyhrberg (Wilfrid Laurier University)

We investigate differences in execution quality and payment-for-order-flow (PFOF) across asset classes. In equities, retail trades receive meaningful price improvement, particularly in tick-constrained stocks, and PFOF is small. In single-name equity options, problematic market structures lead to worse retail price improvement, and PFOF is large. While all option trades execute on-exchange, option exchange rules facilitate internalization. We exploit variation in designated-market-maker (DMM) assignments, minimum tick size, and auction allocation rules, showing that option internalization is imperfectly competitive. Option market structure gives rise to a second potential incentive conflict of brokers: encouraging customers to trade assets offering higher PFOF.

EFA2023_926_MM 03_2_Payment for Order Flow and Asset Choice.pdf


ID: 1449

Market fragmentation and price impact

Lewen Guo, Pankaj Jain

University of Memphis, United States of America

Discussant: Vincent van Kervel (Catholic University of Chile)

We investigate the effects of market fragmentation on price impact. Using a newly launched exchange as a quasi-natural experiment, we find that an exogenous increase in market fragmentation leads to a higher price impact of equity trading in the primary U.S. equity exchanges. Our IV estimates suggest a 1.6% increase in market fragmentation of a stock will induce approximately 2.9 bps increases in NBBO-based price impact and much more significant increases in exchange-based price impact for trading that stock. We attribute the increases in price impact to both the mechanical channel and the informational channel. Our results are providing supportive evidence to the recent theories such as Chen and Duffie (2021) that the introduction of a new lit exchange changes the landscape of trading in a multi-market setting, therefore leading to an increase in the price impact of trading.

EFA2023_1449_MM 03_3_Market fragmentation and price impact.pdf


 
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