Market Microstructure and Strategies: Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e, Jeff Madura
Market Microstructure and Strategies: Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e, Jeff Madura
Market Microstructure and Strategies: Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e, Jeff Madura
Market Microstructure
and Strategies
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Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e, Jeff Madura
Copyright ©2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
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Chapter Outline
Common types of stock transactions
How stock transactions are executed
Regulation of stock transactions
How barriers to international stock
trading have been reduced
Stock Market Transactions
Placing an order
Brokerage firms:
Serve as financial intermediaries between buyers an sellers
of stock
Receive orders from customers and pass the orders on to
the exchange through a telecommunications network
Full-service brokers offer advice to customers on stocks
to buy or sell
Charge about 4 percent of the transaction amount
Discount brokers only execute the transactions
Charge about 1 percent of the transaction amount
The larger the transaction amount the lower the
percentage charged by many brokers
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Placing an order (cont’d)
Investors communicate their order to brokers by
specifying:
The name of the stock
Whether to buy or sell that stock
The number of shares to be bought or sold
Whether the order is a market order or a limit order
A market order to buy or sell a stock means to
execute the transaction at the best possible price
A limit order differs from a market order in that a limit
is placed on the price at which a stock should be
purchased or sold
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Placing an order (cont’d)
Stop-loss orders:
Are orders where the investor specifies a selling price
that is below the current market price of the stock
Are typically placed by investors to either protect
gains or limit losses
Stop-buy orders are orders where the
investor specifies a purchase price that is
above the current market price
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Placing an order (cont’d)
Placing an order online
Many brokers accept orders online, provide real-time quotes,
and provide access to information
Individual investors maintain more than 5 million online
brokerage accounts
About one of every seven stock transactions is initiated online
Traditional brokers have started to offer some online services
Some of the more popular online brokers include Ameritrade,
Charles Schwab, Datek, E*Trade, and National Discount
Brokers
Average execution speed is about 8 seconds
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Margin trading
A margin trade involves cash along with funds
borrowed from the broker
The Federal Reserve imposes margin
requirements which limit the amount of
credit brokers can extend to their customers
Currently, at least 50 percent of an investor’s
invested funds must be paid in cash
Margin requirements are intended to ensure that
investors can cover their position if the value of their
investment declines over time
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Margin trading (cont’d)
Investors:
Must establish a margin account with their broker
Are required to satisfy a maintenance margin
Initially satisfy the maintenance margin with the
initial margin
Impact on returns
The return on stocks purchased on margin is:
SP INV LOAN D
R
INV
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Computing the Return on A
Margin Purchase
Billy purchases a stock on margin, borrowing 50% of the funds
necessary to complete the purchase. The stock is
currently priced at $50 per share, and the stock pays an
annual dividend of $.50 per share. The brokerage firm
charges an annualized interest rate of 8%. After one year,
the stock is sold at a price of $55 per share. What is the
?return on the margin transaction
SP INV LOAN D
R
INV
$55 $25 $27 $.50
$25
14%
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Computing the Return on A
Margin Purchase (cont’d)
Reconsider the previous example, but assume that the stock
declined from $50 to $47 per share over the one year
period. What would the return on the margin transaction
?have been in this case
SP INV LOAN D
R
INV
$47 $25 $27 $.50
$25
18%
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Margin trading (cont’d)
Impact on returns (cont’d)
Purchasingstock on margin increases the potential
return but magnifies the potential losses
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Computing the Return on A
Cash Purchase
Compute the return that would have been realized in the
previous two examples if Billy had paid the entire price of
.the stock, without borrowing on margin
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Short selling
Ina short sale, investors place an order to
sell a stock that they do not own
Short sellers:
Anticipate a price decline
Essentially borrow the stock from another investor
and will ultimately have to provide that stock back to
the investor
Make a profit equal to the difference between the
original sell price and the price paid for the stock
after subtracting any dividend payments made
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Short selling (cont’d)
Measuring the short position of a stock
The ratio of the number of shares sold short divided
by the total number of shares outstanding is a
measure of the degree of short positions
The short interest ratio is the shares sold short
divided by the average daily trading volume
The higher the short interest ratio, the higher the level of
short sales
The short interest ratio is also measured for the market to
determine the level of short sales for the market overall
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Stock Market Transactions
(cont’d)
Short selling (cont’d)
Using a stop-buy order to offset short selling
Investors who have established a short position
commonly request a stop-buy order to limit their
losses
e.g., an investor sells shares short for $50 per share
and places a stop-buy order with a purchase price of
$60
If the stock price rises to $60 or over, the investor will
pay approximately $60 per share
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How Trades Are Executed
Floor brokers:
Are situated on the floor of stock exchanges
Receive requests from brokerage firms to fulfill
orders and execute them
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Specialists and market-makers
Specialists:
Can serve a broker function
Gain from the bid-ask spread
Take position in specific stocks to which they are
assigned
Have access to the limit order book
Typically handle between 5 and 8 stocks each
Are mostly employed by one of seven specialist firms
Are required to signal floor brokers if they have
unfilled orders
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Specialists and market-makers (cont’d)
Specialists (cont’d):
Make a market in stock they are assigned by standing
ready to buy or sell assigned stocks if no other
investors are willing to participate
Participate in about 10 percent of the value of all
shares traded
Can set the spread to reflect their preferences
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Specialists and market-makers (cont’d)
Front running involves the specialist setting a price
below the price offered by other investors
May prevent other investors from having their orders
executed if the price reverses as a result
The “trade-through rule” on the NYSE requires that an order
for stocks must be executed on the exchange that offers
the best price
In 2004:
The SEC investigated several specialist firms for various
illegal activities
The SEC allows investors to circumvent the trade-through
rule
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Specialists and market-makers (cont’d)
Transactions in the Nasdaq market are
facilitated by market makers, who:
Stand ready to buy stocks in response to customer
orders made through a telecommunications network
Benefit from the spread between the bid and ask prices
Can take positions in stocks
Often take positions to capitalize on the discrepancy
between the prevailing stock price and their own
valuation
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Effect of the spread on transactions costs
The spread:
Is the difference between the ask and bid prices and
is commonly measured as a percentage of the ask
price
Is separate from the commission charged by the
broker
Has declined substantially over time due to increased
efficiency of executing orders and increased
competition from ECNs
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Computing the Spread
Your broker quotes a bid price of $28.50
and an ask price of $29.05 for
Palmetto stock. What is the bid-ask
?spread
$29.05 $28.50
Spread
$29.05
1.89%
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Effect
of the spread on transactions costs
(cont’d)
The spread is influenced by the following factors:
Order costs (+) represent the cost of processing orders,
including clearing costs and recording transactions
Inventory costs (+) represent the cost of maintaining an
inventory of a particular stock
If interest rates are high, the opportunity cost of holding
inventory is high
Competition (–) reduces the spread
Volume (–) increases liquidity and reduces the risk of a
sudden decline in the stock’s price
Risk (+) increases volatility and the risk for the specialist
or market-maker
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Proses Pelaksanaan di Bursa
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Proses Pelaksanaan Perdagangan secara
Remote
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Electronic communication networks (ECNs):
Are automated systems for disclosing and sometimes
executing stock trades
Were created in the mid-1990s to publicly display buy and
sell orders of stock
Were adapted to facilitate the execution of orders and
normally serve institutional rather than individual investors
Are appealing to traders because they do not require
traders to execute the transaction
Now account for about 30 percent of the total trading
volume on the Nasdaq
Execute a small proportion of all transactions on the NYSE
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Electronic communication networks (ECNs)
(cont’d)
Some ECNs focus on market orders while others focus
on limit orders
When a new limit order matches an existing order, the
transaction is immediately executed
Archipelago serves as an ECN for many online buyers
and sellers
Established the first truly electronic stock exchange which
allows trading of NYSE, AMEX, and Nasdaq stocks
Island facilitates the trading of about 100 million shares
per day on the Nasdaq
Instinet facilitates daily stock transactions requested by
U.S. financial institutions after the U.S. exchanges are
closed
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Electronic communication networks (ECNs)
(cont’d)
Interaction between direct access brokers and ECNs
A direct access broker is a trading platform on a computer
website that allows investors to trade stocks without the use
of a broker
The website serves as the broker and interacts with ECNs
that can execute the trade
Examples include Schwab’s CyberTrader, Touch Trade,
FidelityTrading, and NobleTrading
To use a direct access broker, investors must meet certain
requirements
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Program trading
The NYSE defines program trading as the simultaneous
buying and selling of a portfolio of at least 15 different
stocks that are in the S&P 500 index and have an
aggregate value of more than $1 million
The most common program traders are large securities
firms
Program trading is commonly used to reduce the
susceptibility of a stock portfolio to stock market
movements
Program trading can be combined with the trading of
stock index futures to create portfolio insurance
More than 20 million shares per day are traded as a
result of program trading
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Program trading (cont’d)
Impact of program trading on stock volatility
Program trading can cause share prices to reach a
new equilibrium more rapidly
Furbush found that greater declines in stock prices
were not systematically associated with more intense
program trading during the 1987 crash
Roll found that markets that do not use program
trading declined more than markets using program
trading around the 1987 crash
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How Trades Are Executed
(cont’d)
Program trading (cont’d)
Collars applied to program trading
Collars
(“curbs”) on the NYSE restrict program trading
when the DJIA changes by 2 percent from the closing
index on the previous trading day
Program selling is allowed only when the last movement
in the stock’s price was an uptick
Program buying is allowed only when the last movement
in the stock’s price was a downtick
Collars
are intended to prevent program trading from
adding momentum to the prevailing direction of
movement
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Regulation of Stock Trading
Stock
trading is regulated by the individual
exchanges and by the SEC
The Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 were enacted to prevent unfair or unethical
trading practices on the security exchanges
The NYSE:
States that every transaction made at the exchange is
under surveillance
Uses a computerized system to detect unusual trading
Employs personnel who investigate any abnormal price or
trading volume
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Regulation of Stock Trading
(cont’d)
In2002, the NYSE required its listed firms
to have their board of directors
composed of a majority of independent
members
Intended to reduce potential conflict of
interests
The NYSE was criticized in 2003 for not
abiding by some of the governance guidelines
it was requiring of other firms
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Regulation of Stock Trading
(cont’d)
Circuit breakers:
Are restrictions on trading when stock prices or a stock
index reaches a specified threshold level
Currently have three levels on the NYSE for a daily
change in the DJIA from its previous closing price:
Level 1 (10%) resulting in a 30- or 60-minute trading halt
Level 2 (20%) resulting in a 1- to 2-hour trading halt
Level 3 (30%) resulting in the market closing for the day
Trading halts:
Can be imposed for individual stocks if the stock
exchange believes market participants need more time
to receive and absorb material information
Are intended to reduce stock price volatility
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Regulation of Stock Trading
(cont’d)
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
The Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934:
Gave the SEC authority to monitor the exchanges
Required listed companies to file a registration statement
and financial reports
According to SEC regulations:
Firms must publicly disclose all information about
themselves that could affect their stock price
Employees of firms may only trade their own firm’s stock
when they do not have inside information
Participants in security markets who facilitate trades must
work in a fair and orderly manner
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Regulation of Stock Trading
(cont’d)
Securities
and Exchange Commission
(SEC) (cont’d)
Structure of the SEC
Composed of five commissioners appointed by the
U.S. president and confirmed by the Senate
Commissioners have five-year staggered terms
One commissioner chairs the SEC
Commissioners assess whether existing regulations
are successfully preventing abuses ad revise
regulations as needed
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Regulation of Stock Trading
(cont’d)
Securities
and Exchange Commission
(SEC) (cont’d)
Key divisions of the SEC
The Division of Corporate Finance reviews the
registration statement filed when a firm goes public,
corporate filings, and proxy statements
The Division of Market Regulation requires the orderly
disclosure of securities trades by various
organizations
The Division of Enforcement assesses possible
violations of the SEC’s regulations and can take action
against individuals or firms
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Regulation of Stock Trading
(cont’d)
Securities
and Exchange Commission
(SEC) (cont’d)
SEC oversight of corporate disclosure
In October 2000, the SEC issued Regulation FD
Requires firms to disclose relevant information broadly to
investors at the same time
Some analysts suggest that Regulation FD has caused
firms to disclose less information
SEC oversight of analyst recommendations
The SEC has become concerned about analyst
recommendations that appear excessively optimistic
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How Barriers to International
Stock Trading Have Decreased
Reduction in transaction costs
Some countries have consolidated their exchange,
increasing efficiency and reducing transaction costs
Eurolist
The Swiss stock exchange
Reduction in information costs
Information via the Internet
Attempts to make accounting standards uniform across
countries
Reduction in exchange rate risk
The euro should lead to more stock offerings in Europe
by U.S. and European-based firms
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