Markets and Trading


Kevin Crotty
BUSI 448: Investments

Where are we?

Last time:

  • Arbitrage

Today:

  • Adverse Selection
  • Market structure
  • Liquidity

A Simple Market

Set-up

  • I need volunteers: four “buyers” and one “seller”.
  • Market for an asset with true value between $0 and $10
  • The value is written inside each seller’s envelope.
  • Buyers: write an offer for some amount (your choice!) to bid on the seller’s envelope

Seller Instructions

  • Look at envelope value but do not disclose!
  • Collect all the offers
  • Evaluate whether you are willing to accept any, and if so, which one
    • suggestion: accept if and only if the offer exceeds the envelope value

Our market outcomes

  • When all offers are in, compute the profit/loss for the buyer.
  • Who made money and why?

  • The expected value, based on the full distribution of possible values, is common knowledge to all.
  • For this market, what is the expected value of the envelope?
  • The realized value, known only to the seller, is \(V\).
  • What happens when a buyer makes an offer, \(X\), of:
    • \(X < V\)
    • \(X = V\)
    • \(X > V\)
    • \(X = E[V]\)

Liquidity needs

  • Suppose that our seller has an urgent liquidity need to trade
    • Moving to NYC and needs to sell,
    • In bankruptcy and liquidating to pay off note,
    • On the run from the law and needs to liquidate my IOU for hard cash

Offers with liquidity needs

  • What offer would you make if you know for certain that the seller has a liquidity need?
    • assume that sellers with a liquidity need are willing to sell for as little as half the true value
  • What offer would you make if you know that the seller has a liquidity need with 50% probability (but you do not know for sure if a given seller does or does not have a liquidity need)?

Information asymmetry

Adverse selection

  • Adverse selection occurs when one party to a transaction takes advantage of having better information than the other party
  • Classic examples outside of financial markets:
    • used car markets
    • insurance

Information advantages in financial markets

  • Macroeconomic news
    • gov’t agencies aggregate important economic stats
    • policy response: silo information releases
  • Firm-specific information
    • trades by insiders
    • policy response #1: ban insider trading
    • policy response #2: pre-scheduled trading plans

Solutions to adverse selection

  • Market failure
    • One solution is that an uninformed trader does not participate!
  • Signaling
    • The informed party tries to convey their information in some way
    • Ex: used car seller allows the buyer to take the car to a mechanic

Solutions to adverse selection

  • Screening
    • Uninformed party tries to sort informed agents in order to reveal the information
    • Ex: low-premium, high-deductible insurance plans
  • Intermediaries
    • Intermediaries are specialists in information production and evaluation
    • Reputational capital is at stake for them
    • Ex: certified used car programs; ratings agencies

Primary + secondary markets

Primary versus secondary markets

  • Primary market
    • an issuing institution is interacting with the market and raising capital
  • Secondary markets
    • trades are generally between any interested party
    • firm or government need not be involved

Primary markets: equities

  • Firms raise equity capital through
    • initial public offerings (IPOs)
    • or seasoned equity offerings (SEO; sale of shares in already public firm)

Some IPO facts

  • On average, IPOs experience a large first day price “pop” relative to offer price
  • Not all IPOs are underpriced, and the allocation of shares in underpriced vs. overpriced IPOs is non-random.

IPO underpricing

Source: Jay Ritter (UFlorida)

A potential reason for underpricing

Adverse Selection and The Winner’s Curse

  • Assume you are a small investor who is asking for an allocation of 1,000 shares in each of two IPOs.
    • One overpriced by 20%; the other underpriced by 20%.
    • Do you break even?
  • For overpriced offering, few other people ask for shares and you typically get all 1,000 shares you request.
  • For underpriced offering, EVERYONE asks for shares, and small investors typically get shares only rarely.

  • For the sake of argument, assume you get shares half the time in good IPOs, and all the time in bad IPOs.
  • Expected return: 50% \(\cdot\) (+20%) + 100% \(\cdot\) (-20%) = -10%
  • An investor who participates in an IPO expected to be just fairly priced is likely to make a negative return and thus would not wish to participate.
  • To overcome the adverse selection problem and get investors to participate at all, issuers must set a lower price for the IPO.
  • On average IPO money is left on the table, but the typical investor will not profit much

Secondary markets: equities

  • Trading is starts and finishes each day with opening and closing auctions
  • Intraday trading is primarily a continous, limit-order-book market

Primary markets: Treasuries

  • Treasuries sold via sealed-bid, single-price auctions.
  • Competitive bids
    • Bidder specifies rate or yield that is acceptable
    • Limited to 35% of the offering amount for each bidder
  • Noncompetitive bids
    • Bidder agrees to accept rate determined at auction
    • Limited to purchases of $5 million per auction

Primary market clearing

  • Treasury awards all noncompetitive bids and then accepts competitive bids in ascending order of their rate until the quantity of awarded bids = offering amount.
  • All bidders receive same rate as the highest accepted bid.

Imperfect information: Winner’s Curse

  • A Treasury auction is one in which buyer’s bid for an asset with common, but unknown value.

  • Everyone bidding must estimate the value of the asset

    • Each uses their own valuation model and information \(\rightarrow\) different estimates of value
  • The winner’s curse afflicts a buyer who wins the auction, but is cursed by the price paid

    • the price paid exceeds the true value of the asset
  • Why? The buyer who wins is also the buyer that likely overestimated the value!

Avoiding the Winner’s Curse

  • Condition your bid on both
    • your estimate of value
    • on what it means if you are the winning bidder.
  • Shade your bid down based on the fact that winning means you are on the high side of the estimates
    • Larger adjustment with more competing bidders
    • Larger adjustment with more uncertainty about valuation

Winner’s Curse Example

  • Oil and Gas Lease Auctions
  • “If one wins a tract against 2 or 3 others, he may feel fine about his good fortune. But how should he feel if he won against 50 others?” (Capen, Clapp, Campbell)

Secondary markets: Treasuries

  • The secondary market is an over-the-counter dealer market.
  • Extremely liquid market
  • Trading occurs around the clock – New York, London, Tokyo as main centers
  • Primary dealers are the principal market makers
  • Most of the trading volume occurs in on-the-run issues (most recently issued)
  • Settlement is T+1

When-Issued Market

  • issues trade prior to Treasury issuance
  • trading occurs from the day the auction is announced until the issue date

Types of Markets

Types of Markets

  • Limit order book trading (continuous)
  • Over-the-counter markets (dealer markets)
  • Call markets

Limit order book markets

  • Continuous markets: trades can occur at any time when the market is open
  • A limit order is an order with a price specified.
    • Buy at price of x or less
    • Sell at price of x or more
    • If not immediately executable, it goes into the “book.”
    • Has execution risk

  • Market orders are orders to trade “at market,” taking whatever price is available.
    • Has price risk
  • Your broker is required to route your executable order to the venue offering the best price.

Examples of LOB markets:

  • Equity market intraday trading (NYSE, Nasdaq)
  • Futures, options, FX markets

Bid-ask spread

  • The price on a limit sell order is called an ask or offer price.
  • The price on a limit buy order is called a bid.
  • The best (lowest) ask and best (highest) bid are called the inside quotes.
  • The difference between the best ask and the best bid is called the bid-ask spread or bid-offer spread.

Example of a limit order book (CBOE)

The bid-ask spread is 180.03–180.02.

Order priority

  • Most trading venues use price priority to rank orders
    • Highest-priced buy orders get preference.
    • Lowest-priced sell orders get preference.
  • Next is usually time priority
    • Orders placed first get preference.
  • Concerns about execution risk lead to traders attempting to jump to the front of the line.

Over-the-counter markets (dealer markets)

  • Dealers and other traders are linked electronically.
  • Characterized by search costs of finding a suitable counterparty

Examples include secondary trading in:

  • corporate bonds
  • government bonds
  • money market instruments
  • some equities

Call markets

  • Markets for some assets are called periodically, at which point trade occurs.
  • The price-setting mechanism is some form of an auction.

Examples:

  • Gov’t bond auctions
  • open/close for equity markets
  • intraday for low-activity equities (sporadic call auctions)

Brokers vs. Dealers

Brokers

  • A broker is an agent:
    • They have no stake in the valuation of the item in the exchange
    • They receive compensation for bringing buyers and sellers together.
  • Brokers:
    • find counterparties to trades
    • do not necessarily take a position in the assets for which they help people find counterparties
    • receive a commission, which is a transactions cost

Dealers

  • Dealers are principals:
    • valuation of the item matters to their bottom line.
    • make money both through bringing buyers and sellers together and through changes in the valuation of the items they trade.
  • Market makers are traders that take short-term positions in securities in the hopes of earning the bid-ask spread.
  • stand ready to buy or sell to whomever comes along
  • provide liquidity and compensated through bid-ask spread for providing it.

Liquidity and adverse selection

A private information example

  • Consider a market for an asset which everyone agrees ex ante is either worth $10 or nothing, with equal probability.
  • What is the fair value of the security?
  • Now suppose that some existing asset owners receive private information that the realized value is $0.
    • How should they trade if given the chance?

Market making

  • Consider a market maker who believes that some traders will be trading for liquidity purposes and others may receive private information.
  • What should the market maker offer to buy the asset for?
    • $5? less than $5?
  • The market maker should condition their bid price on the fact that trading at the bid means there is a seller who wants to trade.
    • Similarly, their ask price should be conditioned on the fact that there is a buyer who wants to trade.

Example (cont’d)

  • Say the market maker chooses to bid $4.95 for the asset.
  • The privately informed trader will be happy to sell the asset for $4.95.
    • They know they are getting $4.95 above the true value of the asset.
  • We say that the market maker was adversely selected by the privately informed trader.
  • What happens next?

Updating about underlying values

  • As privately informed owners continue to dump their shares, the market maker should keep lowering their bid (and ask) price.
  • That is, they are updating their beliefs to think that the $0 outcome is more likely than 50%!
  • Similar intuition applies to the ask price.
    • As more buyers arrive to trade at the ask price, the market maker should infer that traders are privately informed that the true value is $10!

Bid-ask spreads and adverse selection

  • Bid-ask spreads arise as compensation for potential adverse selection.
  • Formally, the bid price is the expected value of the asset conditional on the next trader wanting to sell the security
    • \(E[V | \text{sell}]\)
    • and hence potentially having negative information about the asset value

  • The ask price is the expected value of the asset conditional on the next trader wanting to buy the security
    • \(E[V | \text{buy}]\)
    • and hence potentially having positive information about the asset value

Bid-ask spread = \(E[V | \text{buy}] - E[V | \text{sell}]\)

So how do market-makers make money?

  • But market makers do exist in financial markets!
  • Why aren’t they all out of business?
  • As long as there are some uninformed investors or investors that need to trade for reasons unrelated to the true value of the security, market makers can earn the difference between the bid and ask prices.

Liquidity

Liquidity is the ease with which one can convert an asset into cash.

  • Can you sell the asset quickly?
  • Can you sell it with little loss in value?

Examples:

  • Treasury bills and index ETFs are liquid assets
  • Corporate bonds, private equity, and real estate are illiquid assets

Price impact

  • Quoted prices apply to moderate size order only. A large order may not be executed at the same price.
  • Dealers don’t hold arbitrarily large inventories and worry about whether a large trade signals private info.
  • Market impact must be estimated by the investor based on the current perceived liquidity.
  • Why not just split up the trade?
    • If trading on private information, you may be pressured to act quickly or the information will be incorporated into the price.

Buying 20,000 shares would push the price to 180.05

Information and Trading

Institutional trading

  • Mutual funds etc. typically execute trades over several days, trading a small amount at a time, to minimize the price impacts of their trades.
    • Brokers provide algorithms optimized to minimize price impacts.
  • High frequency trading (HFT) is a different kind of automated trading.
    • HFTs look for opportunities that may only exist for only a millisecond and only earn a penny a share or less.

Internalization and payment for order flow

  • Retail orders are primarily executed on Alternative Trading Systems rather than the limit order book.
  • Your broker/dealer may execute your order itself, to earn the bid-ask spread.
  • Or your broker may send your order to another institution in exchange for a “kickback” of part of the spread.
  • You are nevertheless supposed to get the National Best Bid or Offer (NBBO).

Transparency

  • Transparency: what and when information is available
  • Pre-trade transparency
    • indicative orders visible (prices & quantities)
  • Post-trade transparency
    • trade information visible (prices & quantities)

Transparency across markets

Different markets provide differing levels of transparency.

  • Some markets only display top of the book (best bid/offer or top N)

  • Others show entire LOB

  • Equity and options markets are fairly transparent

  • Corporate bond markets are less transparent, but have become more so.

Knowledge of most recent pricing is valuable!

From 2022 NYSE Proprietary Market Data Pricing Guide:

For next time: Leverage + Margin