Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The investment process has been described as a three legged stool supported equally by securities
research, portfolio management and securities trading.
Buy-side traders are professional traders employed by investment manager or institution investors who
place the trades that execute the decision of portfolio managers (quickly, without errors and with
favorable price.
Market microstructure: the market structures and processes that affect how managers interest in
buying and selling an asset is translated into execute trades.
Order types:
- A market order: is an instruction to execute an order promptly in the public market at the best
price available. A market order emphasizes immediacy execution. (price uncertainty)
- A limit order: is an instruction to trade at the best price but only if the price is at least as good as
the limit price specified in the order. A market order emphasizes price. (execution uncertainty)
- Market not held order:
Types of Markets:
- Liquidity: the ability to trade without delay at relatively low cost and in relatively large
quantities.
- Transparency: availability of timely and accurate market and trade information.
- Assurity of completion: trade settle without problems under all market conditions.
- Trade settlement: involves the buyers payment for the asset purchased and the transfer of
formal ownership of this asset.
In what follows, we describe the chief ways trading is organized:
- Quote-driven (or dealer) markets, in which members of public trade with dealers rather than
directly with one another.
- Order-driven markets, in which members of the public trade with one another without the
intermediation of dealers.
- Brokered markets, in which the trader relies on a broker to find the other side of a desired
trade.
Quote-driven (Dealers) market:
Quote driven markets rely on dealers to establish firm prices at which securities can be bought or sold.
A dealer sometimes referred to as a market makers.
Note: the quantity associated with the bid/ask price is often referred to as the bid/ask size.
Example:
Dealer A: bid 98.85 for 600 shares; ask 100.51 for 1,000 shares.
Dealer B: bid 98.84 for 500 shares; ask 100.55 for 500 shares.
Dealer C: bid 98.82 for 700 shares; ask 100.49 for 800 shares.
Limit order. The inside bid, or market bid, which is the highest and best bid: 98.85 from dealer A.
The inside ask, or market ask, which is the lowest and best ask from dealer C: 100.49. The inside
quote, or market quote -> 98.85-100.49. Market spread = 1.64. Midquote (halfway between the
market bid and ask prices) = 99.67
However, in some markets, it is also possible for the trader to direct the buy order to a specific dealer
(reliable, as one example, currency markets are dealer markets, and institution active in those markets
may screen counterparties on credit criteria.
Dealer have played important roles in bond and equity markets because dealers can help market
operate continuously (being ready to take the opposite side of a trade). Dealers also play important
roles in markets requiring negotiation of the terms of the instrument, such as forward markets and swap
markets, where otherwise finding a counterparty to the instrument would often not be feasible.
The effective spread is 2 times the deviation of the actual execution price from the midpoint of the
market quote at the time an order is entered. The effective spread is a better representation of the true
cost of a round-trip transaction because it captures both price improvement and the tendency for the
large orders to move price (market impact)
Notes: if the effective spread is less than the market bid-asked spread. It indicates good trade execution
or a liquid security. More formally:
Effective spread for a buy order = 2 x (execution price midquote)
Effective spread for a sell order = 2 x (midquote execution price)
Effective spread is a better measure of the effective round trip cost (buy and sell) of a transaction than
the quoted bid-asked spread. Effective spread reflects both price improvement (some trades are
executed at better than the bid-asked quote) and price/market impact (other trades are done outside
the bid-asked quote).
The price improvement has resulted in an effective spread that is lower than the quoted spread.
The average effective spread is the mean effective spread (sometimes dollar weighted) over all
transactions in the stock in the period under study. The average effective spread attempts to measure
the liquidity of a securitys market.
Example: The effective spread of an illiquid stock
The average effective spread
The share volume weighted effective spread
In the first trade, there was a price improvement because shares were sold at a price above the bid
price. Therefore, the effective spread is less than the quoted spread.
Empirical research confirms that the effective bid-ask spreads are lower in higher volume securities
because dealers can achieve faster turnaround in inventory, which reduces their risk. Market makers are
not simply passive providers of immediacy but must also take an active role in price setting to rapidly
turn over inventory without accumulating significant positions on one side of the market.
Order-driven markets:
Order-driven markets are markets in which transaction prices are established by public limit orders to
buy or sell a security at specified prices. Such markets feature trades btw public investors, usually
without intermediation by designated dealers (market makers)
There might be more competition for orders, but it is also possible that a trader might be delayed in
executing a trade or be unable to execute it because a dealer with an inventory of the security is not
present.
Electronic Crossing Networks: are markets in which buy and sell orders are batched (accumulated) and
crossed at a specific point in time. Crossing networks serve mainly institutional investors.
Advantages: avoid the costs of dealer services (the bid-ask spread), the effects a large order can have on
execution prices, and information leakage.
Disadvantages: crossing participants cannot be guaranteed that their trades will find an opposing match:
the volume in a crossing system is determined by the smallest quantity submitted.
The market bid and ask prices of the stock: $30.1 and $30.16
Total volume is 7,000 shares and the execution price is at the midquote = 30.13
Crossing networks provide no price discovery (transaction prices adjust to equilibrate supply and
demand). Because the crossing network did not provide price discovery, price could not adjust upward
to uncover additional selling interest and fully satisfy trader As demand to buy.
Auction market-> provide price discovery.
Many order-driven markets are auction markets- that is, markets in which the order of multiple buyers
compete for execution.
- Periodic auction markets/batch auction markets (where multilateral trading occurs at a single
price at a prespecified point in time). Examples: the open of close of some stock exchange and
the reopening of the Tokyo Stock Exchange after the midday lunch break; at these times, orders
are aggregated for execution at a single price.
- Continuous auction markets (where orders can be executed at any time during the trading day).
Automated Auctions (Electronic Limit-Order Markets)-> provide price discovery.
These are computer-based auctions that operate continuously within the day using a specified set of
rules to execute orders. Example: Electronic communication networks (ECNs) such as the NYSE, Arca
Exchange in US.
Automated auctions have been among the fastest growing segments in equity trading. In an ECN, it can
be difficult to distinguish btw participants who are regulated, professional dealers and other
participants, who, in effect, are also attempting to earn spread profits by providing liquidity.
Brokered Markets:
Refers specifically to markets in which transactions are largely effected through a search-brokerage
mechanism away from the public markets (difficult to find liquidity in size)
A block order is an order to sell or buy in a quantity that is large relative to the liquidity ordinarily
available from dealers in the security or in the other markets.
Hybrid markets: combine features of quote-driven, order driven and brokered markets.
The roles of brokers and dealers.
A broker is an agent of the investor. In return for a commission, the broker provides various execution
services:
- Representing the order: The brokers primary task is to represent the order to the market.
- Finding the opposite side of a trade. Often this service requires that the broker act as a dealer
and actively buy and sell shares for the brokers own account. The broker/dealer not bear risk
without compensation (high cost)
- Supplying market information:
- Provide discretion and secrecy: A trader may not want others to know their identity.
- Providing other supporting investment services: financing for the use of leverage, record
keeping, cash management, and safekeeping of securities.
- Supporting the market mechanism: assures the continuance of the needed market facilities.
Notes: the relationship btw the trader and a dealer is essentially adversarial. Holding trade volume
constant, a dealer gains by wider bid-ask spreads while the trader gains by narrower bid-ask spread.
Evaluating Market Quality:
Markets are organized to provide liquidity, transparency and assurity of completion. In details, a liquid
market has the following characteristics:
- The market has relatively low bid-ask spreads (Investors can trade positions without excessive
loss of value)
- The market is deep. Depth means that big trades tend not to cause large price movements.
- The market is resilient. A market is resilent if any discrepancies btw market price and intrinsic
value tend to be small and corrected quickly.
The great advantage of market liquidity is that traders and investors can trade rapidly without a major
impact on price. Liquidity adds value to the companies whose securities trade on the exchange.
Many factors contribute to make a market liquid:
- Many buyers and sellers.
- Diversity of opinion, information, and investment needs among market participants.
- Convenience: readily accessible physical location, electronic platform.
- Market integrity:
Example: Lower quoted/effective spread -> improvement in market quality. Effective spreads are a more
accurate measure of trading costs than quoted spreads.
A decline in quoted depths reduced liquidity supply.
The costs of trading:
Trading costs can be thought of as having 2 major components:
Explicit costs: direct costs of trading, such as broker commission costs, taxes, stamp duties, and fee paid
to exchanges.
Implicit costs:
- Bid-ask spread.
- Market impact (or price impact) is the effect of the trade on transaction prices.
Example: suppose a large sell order hits the market and a portion of it get filled at $43.00.
Before the rest of it can be filled, the security price falls $0.1 to $ 42.9, so the rest of the order is
filled at lower bid.
- Missed trade opportunity costs (or unrealized profit/loss) arise from the failure to execute a
trade in a timely manner.
Example: suppose a trader places a 1-day limit buy order at $50.00 for a security when the ask
price is 50.04. The price rises and the order is left unfilled. If the security closes at $50.01, then
the trader has lost out on these profit. The opportunity cost is $0.06.
- Delay costs arise from the inability to complete the desired trade immediately due to its size and
the liquidity of markets.
Volume-Weighted Average Price (VWAP): Implicit costs are measured using some benchmark, such as
the midquote used to calculate the effective spread. An alternative is the VWAP (weighted average of
execution prices during a day)
It allows the fund sponsor to identify when it transacted at a higher or lower price than the securitys
average trade price during the day.
For example, if a buy order for 500 shares was executed at $157.25 and the VWAP for the stock for the
day was $156.00, the estimated implicit cost of the order would be $650.
Disadvantages:
VWAP is less informative for trades that represent a large fraction of volume. In the extreme, if a single
trading desk were responsible for all the buys in the security during the day, the desks average price
would equal VWAP => does not provide useful information.
Broker with sufficient discretion can try to game this measure (to take advantage of a weakness in the
measure, so that the value of the measure may be misleading). For example, if the price has been
moving down, only execute buy transactions which will be at prices below VWAP. If prices are moving
up for the day, only execute sales. ???
Implementation shortfall: is defined as the difference between the money return on a notional or paper
portfolio in which positions are established at the prevailing price when the decision to trade is made
and the actual portfolios return. The methods takes into account not only explicit trading costs, but also
the implicit costs, which are often significant for large orders.
The decision price (arrival price/strike price) is the market price of the security at the time the decision
to trade is made. It can also be called the original benchmark price.
Implementation shortfall can be analyzed into 4 components:
- Explicit costs, including commissions, taxes and fees.
- Realized profit/loss, reflecting the price movement from the decision price to the execution
price for the part of the trade executed on the day it is placed.
- Delay costs (slippage), reflecting change in price over the day an order is placed when the order
is nor executed that day.
- Missed trade opportunity cost (unrealized profit/loss), reflecting the price difference btw trade
cancellation price and the original benchmark price (decision price)
Example:
- The paper portfolio traded 1,000 shares on Tuesday at $10.00 per share. The return on this
portfolio when the order is canceled after the close on Wednesday is the value of the 1,000
shares, now worth 1,000 x 10.08 = 10,080, less the cost of 10,000, for a net gain of 80.
- The real portfolio contains 700 shares (now worth 700 x 10.08 = 7.056)
- The cost of this portfolio is 700 x 10.07 = 7.049, plus 14 in the commission and fees, for a total
cost of 7,063.
- Thus, the total net gain on this portfolio = 7,056 7,063 = -7
The implementation short fall is the return on the paper portfolio minus the return on the actual
portfolio = 80- - (7) = 87. More commonly, the shortfall is 87/10,000 = 87 basis points.
We can break this implementation shortfall down further:
Commissions and fees = 14/10,000 = 0.14%
Realized profit/loss = 700 x (10.07- 10.05) / 10,000 = 0.14%
Delay costs = 700 x (10.05 10.00)/ 10,000 = 0.35%
Missed trade opportunity cost = 300 x (10.08 10.00)/10,000 = 0.24%
Implementation cost = 0.14% + 0.14% + 0.35% + 0.24% = 0.87% or 87 basis point.
Practice:
The paper portfolio: = (20.09 20) x 1,000 = 90
The real portfolio = (20.09 20.06) x 800 18 = 6
The implementation cost = 90 6 = 84
The implementation shortfall = 84/(20 x 1,000) = 42 basis point.
Commissions and fees = 18/20,000 = 9bsp
Realized gain/loss = 800 x (20.06 20.05)/20,000 = 4bsp
Delay cost = 800 x (20.05 20)/20,000 = 20bsp
Opportunity cost = 200 x (20.09 20)/20,000 = 9bsp
Implementation cost = 42bsp.
In this example, shortfall was positive, but this will not always be the case, especially if the effect of the
return on the market is removed. The market model is (
)
In practice, with daily return,