Multimarket Trading and Market Liquidity
- 1 July 1991
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Review of Financial Studies
- Vol. 4 (3) , 483-511
- https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/4.3.483
Abstract
When a security trades at multiple locations simultaneously, an informed trader has several avenues in which to exploit his private information. The greater the proportion of liquidity trading by “large” traders who can split their trades across markets, the larger is the correlation between volume in different markets and the smaller is the informativeness of prices. We show that one of the markets emerges as the dominant location for trading in that security. When informed traders can use their information for more than one trading period, the timely release of price information by market makers at one location adversely affects the profits informed traders expect to make subsequently at other locations. Market makers, competing to offer the lowest cost of trading at their location, consequently deter informed trading by voluntarily making the price information public and by “cracking down” on insider trading.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trading Costs, Liquidity, and Asset HoldingsThe Review of Financial Studies, 1991
- A Theory of Trading in Stock Index FuturesThe Review of Financial Studies, 1991
- Transmission of Volatility between Stock MarketsThe Review of Financial Studies, 1990
- Trading Volume and Asset LiquidityThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1989
- A Theory of Intraday Patterns: Volume and Price VariabilityThe Review of Financial Studies, 1988
- Continuous Auctions and Insider TradingEconometrica, 1985