Predatory Trading
Preprint
- 20 February 2003
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper studies predatory trading: Trading that induces and/or exploits other investors' need to reduce their positions. We show that if one trader needs to sell, others also sell and subsequently buy back the asset. This leads to price overshooting, and a reduced liquidation value for the distressed trader. Hence, the market is illiquid when liquidity is most needed. Further, a trader profits from triggering another trader's crisis, and the crisis can spill over across traders and across assets.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Liquidity risk and arbitrage pricing theoryPublished by World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd ,2008
- Asset Pricing with Liquidity RiskPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2004
- Was There Front Running During the LTCM Crisis?SSRN Electronic Journal, 2003
- Securities lending, shorting, and pricingPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Financial Market RunsPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2002
- Price Impact Costs and the Limit of ArbitrageSSRN Electronic Journal, 2002
- The Case for Flexible Exchange RatesPublished by Springer Nature ,1996
- The Behavior of Stock Prices Around Institutional TradesThe Journal of Finance, 1995
- Stock-Price ManipulationThe Review of Financial Studies, 1992
- Positive Feedback Investment Strategies and Destabilizing Rational SpeculationThe Journal of Finance, 1990