1,930 research outputs found
Optimal client recommendation for market makers in illiquid financial products
The process of liquidity provision in financial markets can result in
prolonged exposure to illiquid instruments for market makers. In this case,
where a proprietary position is not desired, pro-actively targeting the right
client who is likely to be interested can be an effective means to offset this
position, rather than relying on commensurate interest arising through natural
demand. In this paper, we consider the inference of a client profile for the
purpose of corporate bond recommendation, based on typical recorded information
available to the market maker. Given a historical record of corporate bond
transactions and bond meta-data, we use a topic-modelling analogy to develop a
probabilistic technique for compiling a curated list of client recommendations
for a particular bond that needs to be traded, ranked by probability of
interest. We show that a model based on Latent Dirichlet Allocation offers
promising performance to deliver relevant recommendations for sales traders.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Dealing with the Inventory Risk. A solution to the market making problem
Market makers continuously set bid and ask quotes for the stocks they have
under consideration. Hence they face a complex optimization problem in which
their return, based on the bid-ask spread they quote and the frequency at which
they indeed provide liquidity, is challenged by the price risk they bear due to
their inventory. In this paper, we consider a stochastic control problem
similar to the one introduced by Ho and Stoll and formalized mathematically by
Avellaneda and Stoikov. The market is modeled using a reference price
following a Brownian motion with standard deviation , arrival rates of
buy or sell liquidity-consuming orders depend on the distance to the reference
price and a market maker maximizes the expected utility of its P&L over a
finite time horizon. We show that the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equations
associated to the stochastic optimal control problem can be transformed into a
system of linear ordinary differential equations and we solve the market making
problem under inventory constraints. We also shed light on the asymptotic
behavior of the optimal quotes and propose closed-form approximations based on
a spectral characterization of the optimal quotes
Liquidity risk premia : an empirical analysis of european corporate bond yields
In this study we highlight the importance of liquidity risk, especially in periods of market stress, and advocate in favour of an explicit consideration of a liquidity premium when using mark-to-model methodologies to value financial assets.
For European corporate bonds, we show that the liquidity premium, calculated as the difference between the yield spread of corporate bonds and the spread of credit default swaps, grew significantly during the recent market turmoil not only in absolute terms but also in relative terms. Although liquidity premiums were far from stable during the time frame of analysis-from 1 January 2005 to 31 December
2009 - on average roughly 40% of corporate yield spreads can be interpreted in terms of liquidity
premia.
We propose direct matching between the CDS and the underlying reference assets when computing liquidity premia. This differs from what seems to be the industry standard, which is simply to use indices when trying to infer market implied liquidity premia. Although computationally more demanding, the method we use is sounder from a theoretical point of view and produces richer results and analysis. With this method we are able present an analysis of liquidity risk premia per sector of activity
Can We Make Money with Fifth-order Autocorrelation in Japanese Stock Prices?
We first report that one-minute returns on TOPIX have exhibited significant autocorrelation at five-minute intervals since 1997/98, which implies there is an arbitrage opportunity. Special quotes that are issued whenever there is a price jump in excess of a predetermined band seem to be the source of this autocorrelation, since these have been updated at five-minute intervals since August 1998. Individual stock returns also exhibit fifth-order autocorrelation, but this disappears when the data with special quotes are excluded from the sample. The arbitrage opportunities, however, turn out to be spurious since trading is suspended whenever a special quote is issued
Volatility forecasting in the Chinese commodity futures market with intraday data
Given the unique institutional regulations in the Chinese commodity futures market as well as the characteristics of the data it generates, we utilize contracts with three months to delivery, the most liquid contract series, to systematically explore volatility forecasting for aluminum, copper, fuel oil, and sugar at the daily and three intraday sampling frequencies. We adopt popular volatility models in the literature and assess the forecasts obtained via these models against alternative proxies for the true volatility. Our results suggest that the long memory property is an essential feature in the commodity futures volatility dynamics and that the ARFIMA model consistently produces the best forecasts or forecasts not inferior to the best in statistical terms
Oil, the Baltic Dry index, market (il)liquidity and business cycles:evidence from net oil-exporting/oil-importing countries
Monetary Policy and its Impact on Stock Market Liquidity: Evidence from the Euro Zone
The recent financial crisis has been characterized by unprecedented monetary policy interventions of central banks with the intention to stabilize financial markets and the real economy. This paper sheds light on the actual impact of monetary policy on stock liquidity and thereby addresses its role as a determinant of commonality in liquidity. To capture effects both at the micro and macro level of stock markets, we apply panel estimations and vector autoregressive models. Our results suggest that an expansionary monetary policy of the European Central Bank leads to an increase of stock market liquidity in the German, French and Italian markets. These findings are robust for seven proxies of liquidity and two measures of monetary policy
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