1. 2 efficient market hypothesis n in its simplest form asserts that excess returns are...
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EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS In its simplest form asserts that excess
returns are unpredictable - possibly even by agents with special information
Even if this is true for long horizons, it might not be true at short horizons
Microstructure theory discusses the transition to efficiency
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TRANSITION TO EFFICIENCY Glosten-Milgrom(1985), Easley and
O’Hara(1987), Easley and O’Hara(1992), Copeland and Galai(1983) and Kyle(1985)
Two indistinguishable classes of traders - informed and uninformed
Bid and Ask prices are optimally updated by market maker until information is incorporated in prices
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CONSEQUENCES
Informed traders make excess profits at the expense of uninformed traders.
The higher the proportion of informed traders, the faster prices adjust to trades, the wider is the bid ask spread and the lower are the profits per informed trader.
In real settings with choice over volumes and speed of trading, informed traders partly reveal their identity, reducing profits.
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INFORMED TRADERS
What is an informed trader? – Information about true value– Information about fundamentals– Information about quantities– Information about who is informed
Temporary profits from trading but ultimately will be incorporated into prices
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HOW FAST IS THIS TRANSITION? Difficult to estimate Data Problems
– Discreteness of dependent variable– Bid Ask bounce in transaction prices– Irregular timing of measurements
Measuring independent variables– Cannot observe private information trading– Must infer information events
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SIMPLE STATISTICS
First order autoregression of transaction prices (50K observations on IBM) has coefficient of -.4 with t-stat of -101, R2=.16
No implication for trading since cannot buy at the bid price or sell at the ask
Same autoregression for midquote has coefficient -.26 with t-stat -62 and R2=.07
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TIME SERIES PROPERTIES
Both are primarily MA(1) - bid ask bounce for transactions but why for midquotes?
Test for autocorrelation after MA(1):– Transaction prices LB(15)=52 (>>25)– Midquotes LB(15)=1106 (>>>>25)
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THEORY
The higher the proportion of information traders, the faster prices adjust in trade time
When there is information, there is typically a higher proportion of information traders
When there is information, traders are in a hurry so trades are close together
When there is information, prices adjust very fast in calendar time.
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MEASURING INFORMATION
When traders are in a hurry, they are more likely to be informed (short durations)
When trades are large they are more likely to be informative (except perhaps for block trades)
When bid ask spreads are wide, it is likely that the proportion of informed traders is high
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~mbacci/engle/
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EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
Engle, Robert and Jeff Russell,(1998) “Autoregressive Conditional Duration: A New Model for Irregularly Spaced Data, Econometrica
Engle, Robert,(2000), “The Econometrics of Ultra-High Frequency Data”, Econometrica
Dufour and Engle(2000), “Time and the Price Impact of a Trade”, Journal of Finance, forthcoming
Engle and Lunde, “Trades and Quotes - A Bivariate Point Process”
Russell and Engle, “Econometric analysis of discrete-valued,
irregularly-spaced, financial transactions data”
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APPROACH
Model the time to the next price change as a random duration (ACD Model)
This is a model of volatility (its inverse) ACD(2,2) with economic predetermined
variables Key predictors are transactions/time,
volume/transaction, spread
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PRICE PATH
Time Price Duration
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Model 1 Model 2Parameter
.2107(6.14)
.3027(18.22)
1 .0457
(2.60).0507(2.24)
2 .1731
(5.94).1578(5.19)
1 .0769
(1.00).1646(1.61)
2 .5609
(8.07).4600(5.16)
#Trans/Sec -.0440(-12.65)
-.0359(-13.40)
Spread -.0782(-15.68)
Volume/Trans -.0041(-4.58)
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~mbacci/engle/
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EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
Engle, Robert and Jeff Russell,(1998) “Autoregressive Conditional Duration: A New Model for Irregularly Spaced Data, Econometrica
Engle, Robert,(2000), “The Econometrics of Ultra-High Frequency Data”, Econometrica
Dufour and Engle(2000), “Time and the Price Impact of a Trade”, Journal of Finance, forthcoming
Engle and Lunde, “Trades and Quotes - A Bivariate Point Process”
Russell and Engle, “Econometric analysis of discrete-valued,
irregularly-spaced, financial transactions data”
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MODELING VOLATILITY WITH TRANSACTION DATA
Model the change in midquote from one transaction to the next
Build GARCH model of volatility per unit of calendar time
Find that short durations and wide spreads predict higher volatilities in the future
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GARCH(1,1) GARCH&ECON
VARIABLE Coef Std.Err Z-Stat Coef Std.Err Z-Stat
MEAN
DURS -0.008 0.004 -1.892 -0.007 0.002 -4.027
AR(1) 0.279 0.023 12.29 0.186 0.022 8.507
MA(1) -0.656 0.019 -33.86 -0.570 0.016 -35.70
VARIANCE
C 0.988 0.092 10.74 -0.111 0.047 -2.358
ARCH(1) 0.245 0.020 12.33 0.250 0.013 18.73
GARCH(1) 0.622 0.025 24.70 0.158 0.014 11.71
1/DUR 0.587 0.028 21.27
DUR/EXPDUR -0.040 0.005 -7.992
LONGVOL(-1) 0.096 0.011 8.801
1/EXPDUR
SPREAD(-1)>> 0.736 0.065 11.29
SIZE>10000 0.193 0.119 1.624
LOGLIK -112246.3 -107406.4
LB(15) 93.092 0.000 40.810 0.000
LB2(15) 30.422 0.004 169.12 0.000
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~mbacci/engle/
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EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
Engle, Robert and Jeff Russell,(1998) “Autoregressive Conditional Duration: A New Model for Irregularly Spaced Data, Econometrica
Engle, Robert,(2000), “The Econometrics of Ultra-High Frequency Data”, Econometrica
Dufour and Engle(2000), “Time and the Price Impact of a Trade”, Journal of Finance, forthcoming
Engle and Lunde, “Trades and Quotes - A Bivariate Point Process”
Russell and Engle, “Econometric analysis of discrete-valued,
irregularly-spaced, financial transactions data”
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APPROACH
Measure the time between a trade and a new price quote
Predict this based on economic variables correcting for censoring by intervening trades
Find that information variables predict quicker price revisions
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~mbacci/engle/
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EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
Engle, Robert and Jeff Russell,(1998) “Autoregressive Conditional Duration: A New Model for Irregularly Spaced Data, Econometrica
Engle, Robert,(2000), “The Econometrics of Ultra-High Frequency Data”, Econometrica
Dufour and Engle(2000), “Time and the Price Impact of a Trade”, Journal of Finance, forthcoming
Engle and Lunde, “Trades and Quotes - A Bivariate Point Process”
Russell and Engle, “Econometric analysis of discrete-valued,
irregularly-spaced, financial transactions data”
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APPROACH
Extend Hasbrouck’s Vector Autoregressive measurement of price impact of trades
Measure effect of time between trades on price impact
Use ACD to model stochastic process of trade arrivals
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Cumulative percentage quote revision after an
unexpected buy
0
0.02
0.04
0.06
0.08
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21
1/17/91
12/24/90
Transaction Time (t)
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Cumulative percentage quote revision after an unexpected buy
0
0 .02
0 .04
0 .06
0 .080
:00
02:0
5
04:1
0
06:1
5
08:2
0
10:2
5
12:3
0
14:3
5
16:4
0
18:4
5
20:
50
Calendar time (min:sec)
1/17/91
12/24/90
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SUMMARY
The price impacts, the spreads, the speed of quote revisions, and the volatility all respond to information variables
TRANSITION IS FASTER WHEN THERE IS INFORMATION ARRIVING
Econometric measures of information – high shares per trade– short duration between trades– sustained wide spreads
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~mbacci/engle/
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EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
Engle, Robert and Jeff Russell,(1998) “Autoregressive Conditional Duration: A New Model for Irregularly Spaced Data, Econometrica
Engle, Robert,(2000), “The Econometrics of Ultra-High Frequency Data”, Econometrica
Dufour and Engle(2000), “Time and the Price Impact of a Trade”, Journal of Finance, forthcoming
Engle and Lunde, “Trades and Quotes - A Bivariate Point Process”
Russell and Engle, “Econometric analysis of discrete-valued,
irregularly-spaced, financial transactions data”
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Jeffrey R. RussellUniversity of ChicagoGraduate School of Business
Robert F. EngleUniversity of California, San Diego
http://gsbwww.uchicago.edu/fac/jeffrey.russell/research/
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IBM
104.8
104.9
105
105.1
105.2
105.3
105.4
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
Time (Minutes)
Tra
nsa
ctio
n P
rice
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Goal: Develop an econometric model for discrete-valued, irregularly-spaced time series data.
Method: Propose a class of models for the joint distribution of the arrival times of the data and the associated price changes.
Questions: Are returns predictable in the short or long run?How long is the long run? What factors influence thisadjustment rate?
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Hausman,Lo and MacKinlay
Estimate Ordered Probit Model,JFE(1992) States are different price processes Independent variables
– Time between trades– Bid Ask Spread– Volume– SP500 futures returns over 5 minutes– Buy-Sell indicator– Lagged dependent variable
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Let ti be the arrival time of the ith transaction where t0<t1<t2…
A sequence of strictly increasing random variables is called a simple point process.
N(t) denotes the associated counting process.
Let pi denote the price associated with the ith transaction and let yi=pi-pi-1 denote the price change associated with the ith transaction.
Since the price changes are discrete we define yi to takek unique values.That is yi is a multinomial random variable.
The bivariate process (yi,ti), is called a marked point process.
A Little Notation
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11 ,, iiii tytyf
where ,..., 21
1
ii
i yyy and ,...,21
1
ii
i ttt
In the spirit of Engle (1996) we decompose the joint distribution into the product of the conditional and the marginal distribution:
We take the following conditional joint distribution of the arrival time ti and the mark yi as the general object of interest:
ACD
iii
iii
iiii tytqtyygtytyf 11
?
111 ,,,,
Engle and Russell (1998)
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SPECIFYING THE PROBABILITY STRUCTURE
LET be the kx1 vectors indicating the stateobserved and the conditional probability of all k statesrespectively.
That is, takes the jth column of the kxk identity matrix ifthe jth state occurred.
A first order markov chain(1) links these with a transition probability matrix P with theproperties that
a) all elements are non-negativeb) all columns sum to unity
tx~
ttx ~ and ~
1~~
tt xP
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WITH COVARIATES
TRANSITION MATRIX P BECOMES
where ei is the ith column of identity matrix. TO INSURE THAT THIS IS A TRANSITION
MATRIX FOR ALL POSSIBLE VALUES OF THE COVARIATES, USE INVERSE LOGISTIC TRANSFORMATION
tj1tittijt z,exexPr)z(PP
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i
1k
1jjij
k
1jjkjij
k
1jjkj
k
1jjijki
bxA
x~P/Plog
x~Plogx~Plog)/log(
w h i c h i m p l i e s t h a t :
1
1
]exp[1
]exp[k
lllj
iij
ij
bA
bAP
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R e w r i t i n g t h e k - 1 l o g f u n c t i o n s a s h ( ) t h i s c a n b e w r i t t e n i n s i m p l e
f o r m a s :
( 2 ) bAxh )(
w h e r e A i s a n u n r e s t r i c t e d ( k - 1 ) x ( k - 1 ) m a t r i x , b i s a n u n r e s t r i c t e d
( k - 1 ) x 1 v e c t o r a n d x i s a t h e ( k - 1 ) x 1 s t a t e v e c t o r .
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MORE GENERALLY
Let matrices have time subscripts and allow other lagged variables:
The likelihood is simply a multinomial for each observation conditional on the past
ttttttttt zDhCBxAh )()( 111
)log('x);x(L tt
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Even more generally, we define the Autoregressive Conditional Multinomial (ACM) model as:
iji
r
jjtji
q
jjt
p
jjijijti GZhCxBxAh
1,
1,
1,
Where is the inverse logistic function.
Zi might contain ti, a constant term, a deterministic functionof time, or perhaps other weakly exogenous variables.
We call this an ACM(p,q,r) model.
)1()1(: KKh
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The data:
58,944 transactions of IBM stock over the 3 months of Nov.1990 - Jan. 1991 on the consolidated market. (TORQ)
98.6% of the price changes took one of 5 different values.
10-1
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Price Change
Perc
ent
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.125>p if 1,0,0,0
.125p<0 if 0,1,0,0
0=p if 0,0,0,0
0<p.125- if 0,0,1,0
-.125<p if 0,0,0,1
i
i
i
i
i
ix
We thereforeconsider a 5state model defined as
It is interesting to consider the sample cross correlogram ofthe state vector xi.
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15 14 13 12 11
10 9 8 7 6
5 4 3 2 1 =lag
Sample cross correlations of x
up 2up 1
down 1down 2
up 2
up 1
dow
n 1do
wn 2
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Initially, we consider simple parameterizations in which the information set for the joint likelihood consists of the filtration of past arrival times and past price changes.
ACD
iii
ACM
iii
iiii tytqtyygtytyf 11111 ,,,,
Parameters are estimated using the joint distribution of arrival times and price changes.
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ACM(p,q,r) specification:
4321
112
2/1
)()ln( gggg
hCxBxVAh
iiiii
ji
r
jjji
q
jj
p
jjijijiji
ACD(s,t) Engle and Russell (1998) specifies the conditionalprobability of the ith event arrival at time ti+by
w
jjij
v
jjij
t
jjij
s
j ji
jiji x
1
2
111lnln
Where and gj are symmetric. 1 iii tt
iiiI
01
1where ,...,...,,| 21,21 iiiii xxttE
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0
0.001
0.002
0.003
0.004
0.005
0.006
0.007
0.008
Expected Duration
Vo
lati
lity
Conditional Variance of Price Changes as a Function of Expected Duration
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Simulations
We perform simulations with spreads, volume, and transactionrates all set to their median value and examine the long run price impact of two consecutive trades that push the price down 1 ticks each.
We then perform simulations with spreads, volume andtransaction rates set to their 95 percentile values, one at atime, for the initial two trades and then reset them to their median values for the remainder of the simulation.
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-0.3
-0.25
-0.2
-0.15
-0.1
-0.05
0
1 4 7 10 13 16 19 22 25 28 31 34 37 40 43 46 49
Transaction
Do
llars
Median High Transaction Rate Large Volume Wide Spread
Price impact of 2 consecutive trades each pushing the pricedown by 1 tick.
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-0.06
-0.05
-0.04
-0.03
-0.02
-0.01
0
1 4 7 10 13 16 19 22 25 28 31 34 37 40 43 46 49
Transaction
Do
llars
High Transaction Rate Large Volume Wide Spread
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Conclusions
1. Both the realized and the expected duration impact the distribution of the price changes for the data studied.
2. Transaction rates tend to be lower when price are falling.
3. Transaction rates tend to be higher when volatility is higher.
4. Simulations suggest that the long run price impact of a trade can be very sensitive to the volume but is less sensitive to the spread and the transaction rates.