12,241 research outputs found
Optimal algorithmic trading and market microstructure
The efficient frontier is a core concept in Modern Portfolio Theory. Based on this idea, we will construct optimal trading curves for different types of portfolios. These curves correspond to the algorithmic trading strategies that minimize the expected transaction costs, i.e. the joint effect of market impact and market risk. We will study five portfolio trading strategies. For the first three (single-asset, general multi-asseet and balanced portfolios) we will assume that the underlyings follow a Gaussian diffusion, whereas for the last two portfolios we will suppose that there exists a combination of assets such that the corresponding portfolio follows a mean-reverting dynamics. The optimal trading curves can be computed by solving an N-dimensional optimization problem, where N is the (pre-determined) number of trading times. We will solve the recursive algorithm using the "shooting method", a numerical technique for differential equations. This method has the advantage that its corresponding equation is always one-dimensional regardless of the number of trading times N. This novel approach could be appealing for high-frequency traders and electronic brokers.quantitative finance; optimal trading; algorithmic trading; systematic trading; market microstructure
Optimal trading algorithms and selfsimilar processes: a p-variation approach
Almgren and Chriss ("Optimal execution of portfolio transactions", Journal of Risk, Vol. 3, No. 2, 2010, pp. 5-39) and Lehalle ("Rigorous strategic trading: balanced portfolio and mean reversion", Journal of Trading, Summer 2009, pp. 40-46.) developed optimal trading algorithms for assets and portfolios driven by a brownian motion. More recently, Gatheral and Schied ("Optimal trade execution under geometric brownian motion in the Almgren and Chriss framework", Working paper SSRN, August 2010) addressed the same problem for the geometric brownian motion. In this article we extend these ideas for assets and portfolios driven by a discrete version of a selfsimilar process of exponent H in (0,1), which can be either a fractional brownian motion of Hurst exponent H or a truncated LĂ©vy distribution of index 1/H. The cost functional we use is not the classical expectation-variance one: instead of the variance, we use the p-variation, i.e. the Lp equivalent of the variance. We find explicitly the trading algorithm for any p>1 and compare the resulting trading curve (that we call p-curve) with the classical expectation-variance curve (the 2-curve). If p2 then the p-curve is above the 2-curve at the beginning of the execution and below at the end. Therefore, this pattern minimizes the market impact. We also show that the value of p in the p-variation is related to the exponent H of selfsimilarity via p=1/H. In consequence, one can find the right value of p to put into the trading algorithm by calibrating the exponent H via real time series. We believe this result is interesting applications for high-frecuency trading.
Optimal posting price of limit orders: learning by trading
Considering that a trader or a trading algorithm interacting with markets
during continuous auctions can be modeled by an iterating procedure adjusting
the price at which he posts orders at a given rhythm, this paper proposes a
procedure minimizing his costs. We prove the a.s. convergence of the algorithm
under assumptions on the cost function and give some practical criteria on
model parameters to ensure that the conditions to use the algorithm are
fulfilled (using notably the co-monotony principle). We illustrate our results
with numerical experiments on both simulated data and using a financial market
dataset
A comparative analysis of XV-15 tiltrotor hover test data and WOPWOP predictions incorporating the fountain effect
Acoustic measurements from a hovering full scale XV-15 tilt rotor with the advanced technology blades are presented which show the directionality of fountain effect noise. Predicted acoustic directivity results are also presented which show agreement with the measured data. The aeroacoustic code, WOPWOP, was used in conjunction with a mathematical model which simulated the fountain recirculation aerodynamic effect on the rotor blade surface pressures. The predictions were used to identify the spike character in the measured data as fountain effect associated noise. The directivity of the fountain effect noise was observed to be dominant at the rear of the aircraft with increased intensities 45 degrees below the rotor disk planes
Optimal split of orders across liquidity pools: a stochastic algorithm approach
Evolutions of the trading landscape lead to the capability to exchange the
same financial instrument on different venues. Because of liquidity issues, the
trading firms split large orders across several trading destinations to
optimize their execution. To solve this problem we devised two stochastic
recursive learning procedures which adjust the proportions of the order to be
sent to the different venues, one based on an optimization principle, the other
on some reinforcement ideas. Both procedures are investigated from a
theoretical point of view: we prove a.s. convergence of the optimization
algorithm under some light ergodic (or "averaging") assumption on the input
data process. No Markov property is needed. When the inputs are i.i.d. we show
that the convergence rate is ruled by a Central Limit Theorem. Finally, the
mutual performances of both algorithms are compared on simulated and real data
with respect to an "oracle" strategy devised by an "insider" who knows a priori
the executed quantities by every venues
Simulating and analyzing order book data: The queue-reactive model
Through the analysis of a dataset of ultra high frequency order book updates,
we introduce a model which accommodates the empirical properties of the full
order book together with the stylized facts of lower frequency financial data.
To do so, we split the time interval of interest into periods in which a well
chosen reference price, typically the mid price, remains constant. Within these
periods, we view the limit order book as a Markov queuing system. Indeed, we
assume that the intensities of the order flows only depend on the current state
of the order book. We establish the limiting behavior of this model and
estimate its parameters from market data. Then, in order to design a relevant
model for the whole period of interest, we use a stochastic mechanism that
allows for switches from one period of constant reference price to another.
Beyond enabling to reproduce accurately the behavior of market data, we show
that our framework can be very useful for practitioners, notably as a market
simulator or as a tool for the transaction cost analysis of complex trading
algorithms
Does algorithmic trading improve liquidity?
Algorithmic trading has sharply increased over the past decade. Equity market liquidity has improved as well. Are the two trends related? For a recent five-year panel of New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) stocks, we use a normalized measure of electronic message traffic (order submissions, cancellations, and executions) as a proxy for algorithmic trading, and we trace the associations between liquidity and message traffic. Based on within-stock variation, we find that algorithmic trading and liquidity are positively related. To sort out causality, we use the start of autoquoting on the NYSE as an exogenous instrument for algorithmic trading. Previously, specialists were responsible for manually disseminating the inside quote. As stocks were phased in gradually during early 2003, the manual quote was replaced by a new automated quote whenever there was a change to the NYSE limit order book. This market structure change provides quicker feedback to traders and algorithms and results in more message traffic. For large-cap stocks in particular, quoted and effective spreads narrow under autoquote and adverse selection declines, indicating that algorithmic trading does causally improve liquidity
Do Investors Learn About Analyst Accuracy?
We study the impact of analyst forecasts on prices to determine whether investors learn about analyst accuracy. Our test market is the crude oil futures market. Prices rise when analysts forecast a decrease (increase) in crude supplies. In the 15 minutes following supply realizations, prices rise (fall) when forecasts have been too high (low). In both the initial price action relative to forecasts and in the subsequent reaction relative to realized forecast errors, the price response is stronger for more accurate analysts. These price reactions imply that investors learn about analyst accuracy and trade accordingly.Financial Economics, Institutional and Behavioral Economics, Political Economy,
Market impacts and the life cycle of investors orders
In this paper, we use a database of around 400,000 metaorders issued by
investors and electronically traded on European markets in 2010 in order to
study market impact at different scales.
At the intraday scale we confirm a square root temporary impact in the daily
participation, and we shed light on a duration factor in with
. Including this factor in the fits reinforces the square
root shape of impact. We observe a power-law for the transient impact with an
exponent between (for long metaorders) and (for shorter ones).
Moreover we show that the market does not anticipate the size of the
meta-orders. The intraday decay seems to exhibit two regimes (though hard to
identify precisely): a "slow" regime right after the execution of the
meta-order followed by a faster one. At the daily time scale, we show price
moves after a metaorder can be split between realizations of expected returns
that have triggered the investing decision and an idiosynchratic impact that
slowly decays to zero.
Moreover we propose a class of toy models based on Hawkes processes (the
Hawkes Impact Models, HIM) to illustrate our reasoning.
We show how the Impulsive-HIM model, despite its simplicity, embeds appealing
features like transience and decay of impact. The latter is parametrized by a
parameter having a macroscopic interpretation: the ratio of contrarian
reaction (i.e. impact decay) and of the "herding" reaction (i.e. impact
amplification).Comment: 30 pages, 12 figure
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