This paper gives a new answer to the challenging question raised by Glosten (1994): "Is the electronic order book inevitable?". While the order book enables traders to compete to supply anonymous liquidity, the specialist system enables one to reap the benefits from repeated interaction. We compare a competitive limit order book and a limit order book with a specialist, like the NYSE. Thanks to non-anonymous interaction, mediated by brokers, uninformed investors can obtain good liquidity from the specialist. This, however, creates an adverse selection problem on the limit order book. Market liquidity and social welfare are improved by the specialist if adverse selection is severe and if brokers have long horizon, so that reputation becomes ...
We study the role of high-frequency trading in a dynamic limit order market. Fast traders' ability t...
This paper builds on the landmark contribution of Glosten (1994) by treating the determination of li...
This paper analyzes three market structures: a pure limit-order book, a specialist market, and a uni...
This paper gives a new answer to the challenging question raised by Glosten (1994): “Is the electron...
In this paper, we extend the existing empirical evidence on the relationship between the state of th...
In the microstructure literature, information asymmetry is an important determinant of market liquid...
The empirical literature suggests that the limit order book contains information that might be used ...
The NYSE opened the limit-order book to off-exchange traders during trading hours. We address the we...
The NYSE opened the limit-order book to off-exchange traders during trading hours. We address the we...
This paper analyzes liquidity in an order driven market. We only investigate the best limits in the ...
Despite their importance in modern electronic trading, virtually no systematic empirical evidence on...
Who provides liquidity in modern, electronic limit order book, markets? While agency trading can be ...
We provide a three way theoretical comparison of dealer, limit order, and hybrid markets and analyze...
This paper studies the importance of different pieces of limit order book information in characteriz...
We develop a sequential trade model of Iceberg order execution in a limit order book. The Iceberg-tr...
We study the role of high-frequency trading in a dynamic limit order market. Fast traders' ability t...
This paper builds on the landmark contribution of Glosten (1994) by treating the determination of li...
This paper analyzes three market structures: a pure limit-order book, a specialist market, and a uni...
This paper gives a new answer to the challenging question raised by Glosten (1994): “Is the electron...
In this paper, we extend the existing empirical evidence on the relationship between the state of th...
In the microstructure literature, information asymmetry is an important determinant of market liquid...
The empirical literature suggests that the limit order book contains information that might be used ...
The NYSE opened the limit-order book to off-exchange traders during trading hours. We address the we...
The NYSE opened the limit-order book to off-exchange traders during trading hours. We address the we...
This paper analyzes liquidity in an order driven market. We only investigate the best limits in the ...
Despite their importance in modern electronic trading, virtually no systematic empirical evidence on...
Who provides liquidity in modern, electronic limit order book, markets? While agency trading can be ...
We provide a three way theoretical comparison of dealer, limit order, and hybrid markets and analyze...
This paper studies the importance of different pieces of limit order book information in characteriz...
We develop a sequential trade model of Iceberg order execution in a limit order book. The Iceberg-tr...
We study the role of high-frequency trading in a dynamic limit order market. Fast traders' ability t...
This paper builds on the landmark contribution of Glosten (1994) by treating the determination of li...
This paper analyzes three market structures: a pure limit-order book, a specialist market, and a uni...