On the Dark Side of the Market: Identifying and Analyzing Hidden Order Placements
- 8 February 2012
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
Trading under limited pre-trade transparency becomes increasingly popular on financial markets. We provide first evidence on traders' use of (completely) hidden orders which might be placed even inside of the (displayed) bid-ask spread. Employing TotalView-ITCH data on order messages at NASDAQ, we propose a simple method to conduct statistical inference on the location of hidden depth and to test economic hypotheses. Analyzing a wide cross-section of stocks, we show that market conditions reflected by the (visible) bid-ask spread, (visible) depth, recent price movements and trading signals significantly affect the aggressiveness of 'dark' liquidity supply and thus the 'hidden spread'. Our evidence suggests that traders balance hidden order placements to (i) compete for the provision of (hidden) liquidity and (ii) protect themselves against adverse selection, front-running as well as 'hidden order detection strategies' used by high-frequency traders. Accordingly, our results show that hidden liquidity locations are predictable given the observable state of the market.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Undisclosed Orders and Optimal Submission Strategies in a Dynamic Limit Order MarketSSRN Electronic Journal, 2011
- Equity Trading in the 21st CenturySSRN Electronic Journal, 2010
- Hidden liquidity: An analysis of order exposure strategies in electronic stock marketsJournal of Financial Economics, 2009
- The Price Impact of Order Book Events: Market Orders, Limit Orders and CancellationsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2009
- Supply and Information Content of Order Book Depth: The Case of Displayed and Hidden DepthSSRN Electronic Journal, 2007
- Hide-and-Seek in the Market: Placing and Detecting Hidden Orders*European Finance Review, 2007
- Can order exposure be mandated?Journal of Financial Markets, 2004
- The use of undisclosed limit orders on the Australian Stock ExchangeJournal of Banking & Finance, 2001
- One Day in the Life of a Very Common StockThe Review of Financial Studies, 1997
- An Empirical Analysis of the Limit Order Book and the Order Flow in the Paris BourseThe Journal of Finance, 1995