The Value of the Designated Market Maker
- 1 September 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis
- Vol. 42 (3) , 735-758
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022109000004166
Abstract
The proliferation of electronic limit order books operating without dealers raises questions regarding the need for intermediaries with affirmative obligations to maintain markets. We develop a simple model of dealer participation and test it using a sample of less liquid firms that trade on the Paris Bourse. The results indicate that firms with designated dealers exhibit better market quality, and that younger firms, smaller firms, and less volatile firms choose a designated dealer. Around the announcement of dealer introduction, stocks experience an average cumulative abnormal return of nearly 5% that is positively correlated with improvements in liquidity. Overall, these findings emphasize the potential benefits of designing better market structures, even within electronic limit order books, and suggest that purely endogenous liquidity provision may not be optimal for all securities.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trading strategies during circuit breakers and extreme market movementsPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- The Anatomy of a Call MarketJournal of Financial Intermediation, 2001
- An empirical analysis of NYSE specialist tradingJournal of Financial Economics, 1998
- Does the Specialist Matter? Differential Execution Costs and Intersecurity Subsidization on the New York Stock ExchangeThe Journal of Finance, 1997
- An Empirical Analysis of the Limit Order Book and the Order Flow in the Paris BourseThe Journal of Finance, 1995
- The Trades of Market Makers: An Empirical Analysis of NYSE SpecialistsThe Journal of Finance, 1993
- Insider Trading, Liquidity, and the Role of the Monopolist SpecialistThe Journal of Business, 1989
- A proposal to stabilize stock pricesThe Journal of Portfolio Management, 1988
- Using daily stock returnsJournal of Financial Economics, 1985
- Structural Organization of Secondary Markets: Clearing Frequency, Dealer Activity and Liquidity RiskThe Journal of Finance, 1979