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BOOK
Back To Basics With Brice: Bid and Ask De-Mystified
Brice Wightman
$10.00

About this product:
Beginning traders need to know the intricacies of the markets for an understanding of what it takes to succeed. This lesson takes a good look at the "bid and ask" to ensure there is no doubt over the price decisions you make.

BOOK
Payout policy, taxes, and the relation between returns and the bid-ask spread [An article from: Journal of Banking and Finance]
G. Jacoby
$8.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Banking and Finance, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Recent evidence demonstrates that corporate payout policy has shifted from the nearly exclusive use of dividend payout to the inclusion of stock repurchase, primarily through open markets. This trend has been attributed to the tax advantages associated with repurchase relative to dividends. In this paper, we introduce personal taxation and stock repurchase to reexamine the relation between returns and the bid-ask spread. Our model provides insight into the nature of this relation. Tests performed using NYSE, AMEX, and NASDAQ data provide empirical support of our theoretical conclusions. We conclude that the firm's choice of payout policy influences the relation between returns and spreads.

BOOK
Bid-ask bounce and the measurement of price behavior around block trades on the Australian Stock Exchange [An article from: Pacific-Basin Finance Journal]
A. Lepone
$10.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from Pacific-Basin Finance Journal, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
This paper analyses the price behavior surrounding block transactions on the Australian Stock Exchange. Previous research documents a price reversal following block sales and a price continuation following block purchases-an 'asymmetry' in the price reaction to sales and purchases. This paper reports the results of research which examines whether this asymmetry results from measurement error caused by bid-ask effects. The asymmetry reported in previous literature is first re-documented in this study, using returns based on trade prices. When this analysis is repeated using returns calculated from bid-ask quotes which are purged of bid-ask effects, price continuations follow both purchases and sales. This is consistent with the proposition that the asymmetry in the direction of price behavior following block trades is driven by bid-ask effects.

BOOK
Were bid-ask spreads in the FX market excessive during the Asian crisis? [An article from: International Review of Financial Analysis]
A. Sy
$10.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from International Review of Financial Analysis, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Bid-ask spreads for Asian emerging market currencies increased sharply during the Asian crisis. The question is whether the spreads were excessive or in line with standard models of bid-ask spreads. Pre-crisis estimates of the models show that spreads during the crisis were in most cases tighter than predicted and there were only a few cases of excessive spreads. The result is largely explained by substantial increases in exchange rate volatility during the crisis and to some extent by depreciating exchange rates. The empirical models have greater explanatory power for emerging market than for mature market currencies.

BOOK
An Analysis of Intraday Quoted Bid-Ask Spreads in Futures Markets: Evidence from the Sydney Futures Exchange.: An article from: Australian Journal of Management
Matthew Duffy
$5.95

About this product:
This digital document is an article from Australian Journal of Management, published by Australian Graduate School Of Management on December 1, 1998. The length of the article is 7814 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: An Analysis of Intraday Quoted Bid-Ask Spreads in Futures Markets: Evidence from the Sydney Futures Exchange.
Author: Alex Frino
Publication: Australian Journal of Management (Refereed)
Date: December 1, 1998
Publisher: Australian Graduate School Of Management
Volume: 23 Issue: 2 Page: 185(1)

Distributed by Thomson Gale

BOOK
Microstructure effects, bid-ask spreads and volatility in the spot foreign exchange market pre and post-EMU [An article from: Global Finance Journal]
S. Thomas
$10.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from Global Finance Journal, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
This article examines how microstructure effects, evident in high frequency data, influence bid-ask spreads and volatility in transaction price series. It uses the event of European Monetary Union (EMU), and the upheaval that this entailed, as an opportunity to empirically investigate these relationships in the electronic inter-dealer spot FX market. The microstructure effects relate to both price and time. There are two price effects, namely price discreteness and price clustering, and two time effects, namely the time elapsed between sample periods and the time-gap between successive trades or quoted price submissions. Strong evidence emerges that all four factors are important in the determination of bid-ask spreads. This study uses a unique and rich foreign exchange (FX) dataset of global inter-dealer electronic transactions to examine microstructural effects in the spot foreign exchange market. This dataset enables us to shed new light on the debate surrounding the observations that trading volumes have fallen and bid-ask spreads have widened in inter-dealer spot FX markets following European Monetary Union (EMU). Our work provides a more detailed account of the changes that actually occurred at this time, because our data is more comprehensive than has previously been available. Our four-technical-feature explanation is in contrast to the hypothesis of market maker response to exogenous changes in volume as proposed by Hau, Killeen and Moore [Hau, H., Killeen, W., Moore, M. (2000). The euro as an international currency: Explaining puzzling first evidence. Centre for Economic Policy Research, working paper., Hau, H., Killeen, W, Moore, M. (2002). How has the euro changed the foreign exchange market? Economic Policy 17, 34, 149-191]. Price discreteness means that prices or exchange rates are not an infinite number of digits long, but rather they are truncated to a small number of digits. In the case of the FX market, exchange rates are specified to five digit accuracy. Price clustering refers to the fact that traders may not use all available exchange rates uniformly. In practice, rates ending in 0 or 5 tend to be used more than other rates. The time elapsed between the sample periods is important for a very obvious reason- price levels can differ radically if data is sampled from periods that are far apart in time. On the other hand, the time-gap between successive individual prices is also important because it allows these prices to drift apart. When the successive prices are transaction prices, this effect increases volatility. When they are successive bid and ask prices, the bid-ask spread is increased. EMU brought widespread change to financial markets. Much of this change is directly due to the re-denomination of certain instruments from Deutschemarks (DEM) to euros (EUR). Since these currency units are of different values, the nature of the price discreteness affecting instruments which are now denominated in EUR will be different from what it was under DEM denomination. This point is exemplified by our finding that the smallest sized bid-ask spread and smallest price increment for the EUR are both 74% greater than that for the DEM, after controlling for drift in currency values. Our four proposed factors are successful in explaining the observed changes in bid-ask spreads, but are less able to explain the observed changes in price volatility. Also, our results overwhelmingly accept the price resolution hypothesis explanation for price clustering behavior in the spot FX market and overwhelmingly reject the price attraction hypothesis. In the case of the EUR(DEM)/USD bid-ask spread, we provide a deeper understanding of the technical market features that caused this to increase. We show that the widening of the USD/JPY bid-ask spread seems primarily due to the inter-temporal change in currency value. We also show that the narrowing of EUR(DEM)/CHF bid-ask spreads seems largely due a near 50% decrease in the pricing increment used. We find that increased volume has reduced the time-gap for traded and quoted prices for USD/CHF. Finally, in the case of EUR(DEM)/JPY, we find that market practice caused wider bid-ask spreads. The bid-ask spread data evidence suggests that the advent of EMU seems to have strengthened the USD's position as the dominant international vehicle currency. We consider this surprising because we believe that part of the intention in launching the single currency must surely have been the opposite.

BOOK
Effective securities in arbitrage-free markets with bid-ask spreads at liquidation: a linear programming characterization [An article from: Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control]
F. Ortu
$8.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
We consider a securities market with bid-ask spreads at any period, including liquidation. Although the minimum-cost super-replication problem is non-linear, we introduce an auxiliary problem that allows us to characterize no-arbitrage via linear programming techniques. We introduce the notion of effective new security and show that effectiveness restricts the no-arbitrage bid and ask prices of a new security to the interval defined by the minimum-cost problem. We discuss in detail the cases in which the boundaries of this interval can be reached without violating no-arbitrage.

BOOK
Modeling the bid/ask spread: measuring the inventory-holding premium [An article from: Journal of Financial Economics]
R.E. Whaley
$8.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Financial Economics, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
The need to understand and measure the determinants of market maker bid/ask spreads is crucial in evaluating the merits of competing market structures and the fairness of market maker rents. This study develops a simple, parsimonious model for the market maker's spread that accounts for the effects of price discreteness induced by minimum tick size, order-processing costs, inventory-holding costs, adverse selection, and competition. The inventory-holding and adverse selection cost components of spread are modeled as an option with a stochastic time to expiration. This inventory-holding premium embedded in the spread represents compensation for the price risk borne by the market maker while the security is held in inventory. The premium is partitioned in such a way that the inventory-holding and adverse selection cost components, as well as the probability of an informed trade, are identified. The model is tested empirically using Nasdaq stocks in three distinct minimum tick size regimes and is shown to perform well both in an absolute sense and relative to competing specifications.

BOOK
Insider ownership, bid-ask spread, and stock splits: Evidence from the Stock Exchange of Thailand [An article from: International Review of Financial Analysis]
Limpaphayom
$10.95

About this product:
This digital document is a journal article from International Review of Financial Analysis, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
This paper examines the moderating effect of insider ownership on bid-ask spread changes during stock splits in Thailand, an economy with highly concentrated ownership structures. Consistent with the liquidity hypothesis, the overall finding shows that bid-ask spread declines significantly after stock splits. The results also indicate that there is a significant relation between insider ownership and the change in bid-ask spread. Specifically, significant reductions in bid-ask spread occurred mostly among firms with low levels of insider ownership before stock splits. Bid-ask spreads remain virtually unchanged for shares with high ownership concentration. The findings highlight the link between corporate governance structure, market microstructure, and corporate financial decisions in emerging markets.

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