Title of article
Hidden liquidity: An analysis of order exposure strategies in electronic stock markets
Author/Authors
Bessembinder، نويسنده , , Hendrik and Panayides، نويسنده , , Marios and Venkataraman، نويسنده , , Kumar، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
23
From page
361
To page
383
Abstract
Many stock exchanges choose to reduce market transparency by allowing traders to hide some or all of their order size. We study the costs and benefits of order exposure and test hypotheses regarding hidden order usage using a sample of Euronext-Paris stocks, where hidden orders represent 44% of the sample order volume. Our results support the hypothesis that hidden orders are associated with a decreased probability of full execution and increased average time to completion, and fail to support the alternate hypothesis that order exposure causes defensive traders to withdraw from the market. However, exposing rather than hiding order size increases average execution costs. We assess the extent to which non-displayed size is truly hidden and document that the presence and magnitude of hidden orders can be predicted to a significant, but imperfect, degree based on observable order attributes, firm characteristics, and market conditions. Overall, the results indicate that the option to hide order size is valuable, in particular, to patient traders.
Keywords
Trading strategies , Limit order market , Dark pools , Hidden liquidity , Iceberg orders
Journal title
Journal of Financial Economics
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Financial Economics
Record number
2211811
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