Market MicroStructure - Introduction
Market MicroStructure - Introduction
CFA Institute Centre for Financial Market Integrity. (2009). Market Microstructure:The
Impact of Fragmentation under the Markets in Financial Instruments
Directive. CFA Insitute.
Ekkehart Boehmer, G. S. (2005). Lifting the Veil: An Analysis of Pre-trade
Transparency at the NYSE. THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE VOL. LX, NO. 2, 783815.
Fama, E. (1970). Efficient Capital Markets:A Review of Theory and Empirical Work.
Journal of Finance, 383-417.
Flood, M. D. (1991, November). Microstructure Theory and the Foreign Exchange
Market. 52-68. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Frank Fabozzi, F. M. (1996). Capital Markets Instituitions and Instruments. New
Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Madhavan, A. (2000). Market microstructure: A survey. Journal of Financial Markets,
205-258.
Marco Cipriani, a. A. (2007). TRANSACTION COSTS AND INFORMATIONAL CASCADES
IN FINANCIAL MARKETS. Frankfurt: EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK.
O'Hara, M. (1998). Market Microstructure Theory. John Wiley & Sons.
Reto Francioni, S. H. (2008). Equity Market Microstructure:Taking Stock of What We
Know. THE JOURNAL OF PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT, 57-71.
Shimizu, J. M. (1999). Market microstructure and market liquidity. Japan: Bank for
International Settlements.
Stoll, H. R. (2002, May 6). Market Microstructure. Handbook of the Economics of
Finance, pp. 1-64.
Thierry Foucault, M. P. (2013). Market Liquidity - Theory, Evidence, and Policy.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Abstract
This paper reviews literature on market microstructure. Microstructure analysis gives guidance to
market structure development, facilitates the development of trading strategies, there are tests of
market efciency and it also sheds light on how new information is incorporated into securities
prices. The critical factor that drives microstructure analysis is friction in the marketplace (i.e.
the various market imperfections that affect price formation, liquidity and the speed of price
discovery).
INTRODUCTION
Rapid structural technological and regulatory changes affecting the securities industry
worldwide have compelled interest in market microstructure. These changes are due to factors
including but not limited to substantial increase in trading volumes, competition between
exchanges, modifications in the regulatory environment, technological innovations as well as
globalization and the advent of new financial instruments.
In this literature review, we seek to highlight and understand the applications of market
microstructure. Briefly, microstructure analysis gives guidance to market structure development,
facilitates the development of trading strategies, tests market efciency and also sheds light on
how new information is incorporated into the prices of securities (Reto Francioni, 2008).
2
MARKET MICROSTRUCTURE
The study of the process and outcomes of exchanging financial assets under a specific set
of rules refers to market microstructure (O'Hara, 1998). It is concerned with the behavior of
participants in securities markets and with the effects of information and institutional rules on the
economic performance of those markets (Flood, 1991). Key issues such as trading costs,
transparency, price formation, and market design are addressed (CFA Institute Centre for
Financial Market Integrity, 2009).
Microstructure analysis is inherently involved with analyzing the detailed functioning of
a marketplace. The literature on this subject examines the structural factors that determine the
process of financial intermediation. These structural factors, which determine how prices and
volumes reveal investor preferences, are crucial to the efficient functioning of markets.
In a survey of market microstructure (Madhavan, 2000), the writer contends that studies
on the subject fit into four categories. First, price formation and price discovery, which
investigates how prices and volumes incorporate latent demands of investors, including
investigation of determinants of trading costs and processes of how prices embody information.
Second, market structure and design issues, which concern the relationship between price
formation processes and trading rules. Third, information and disclosure, which assumes that the
behaviors of traders are affected by the 1black box. Finally, informational issues arising from
the interface of market microstructure with other areas of finance, such as corporate finance,
asset pricing, and international finance.
2.1
1 The black box here refers to situation in which investors have knowledge of their
inputs (such as orders) and outputs (such as prices and volumes), but without any
knowledge about the internal formation process.
2.2.1
two
basic
structures, namely the limit order market (or auction market) and the dealer
market. In limit order markets, the final investors interact directly, their bids and
offers consolidated in a limit order book, according to price priority, so that higher
bids and cheaper offers are more likely executed.
By contrast, in dealer markets final investors can only trade at the bid and
ask quotes posted by specialized intermediaries, called dealers or market makers,
and these quotes are not consolidated to enforce price priority (Thierry Foucault,
2013). Most real-world markets are a mixture of market types.
The two main roles of a securities market are to provide trading services
for investors and to determine prices that can guide the allocation of capital by
investors and firms. That is, an ideal market structure facilitates efficiency,
enabling investors to trade quickly and cheaply and it incorporates new
information quickly and accurately into prices.
2.2.2
Information efficiency
2.2.3
Market Transparency
Information efficiency has implications on market transparency. The amount of
Transaction costs
routing, execution, and clearing. First, a market provides information about past prices and
current quotes. Second, a mechanism for routing orders is required. Brokers take orders and
route them to an exchange or other market center. The third phase of the trading process is
execution. This is matching an incoming market order with a resting quote. It can be either
dealer-initiated or automated. The trend is towards automated execution systems.
The last phase of the trading process is clearing and settlement. Clearing involves the
comparison of transactions between buying and selling brokers. These are daily comparisons. In
Kenya, the settlement cycle takes place at day t+3, with the cash side of the settlement process
for transactions concluded on the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) done through the Central
Bank of Kenyas (CBK) Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) system and the securities leg of the
settlement process, which entails the transfer of securities between the buyers and sellers, is
carried out at the Central Depository and Settlement Corporation (CDSC).
4 Bibliography
CFA Institute Centre for Financial Market Integrity. (2009). Market Microstructure:The
Impact of Fragmentation under the Markets in Financial Instruments
Directive. CFA Insitute.
Ekkehart Boehmer, G. S. (2005). Lifting the Veil: An Analysis of Pre-trade
Transparency at the NYSE. THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE VOL. LX, NO. 2, 783815.
Fama, E. (1970). Efficient Capital Markets:A Review of Theory and Empirical Work.
Journal of Finance, 383-417.
Flood, M. D. (1991, November). Microstructure Theory and the Foreign Exchange
Market. 52-68. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Frank Fabozzi, F. M. (1996). Capital Markets Instituitions and Instruments. New
Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Madhavan, A. (2000). Market microstructure: A survey. Journal of Financial Markets,
205-258.
Marco Cipriani, a. A. (2007). TRANSACTION COSTS AND INFORMATIONAL CASCADES
IN FINANCIAL MARKETS. Frankfurt: EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK.
O'Hara, M. (1998). Market Microstructure Theory. John Wiley & Sons.
Reto Francioni, S. H. (2008). Equity Market Microstructure:Taking Stock of What We
Know. THE JOURNAL OF PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT, 57-71.
Shimizu, J. M. (1999). Market microstructure and market liquidity. Japan: Bank for
International Settlements.
Stoll, H. R. (2002, May 6). Market Microstructure. Handbook of the Economics of
Finance, pp. 1-64.
Thierry Foucault, M. P. (2013). Market Liquidity - Theory, Evidence, and Policy.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.