Crossed and Locked Quotes in a Multi-Market Simulation
Authored by Andrew Todd, Peter Beling, William Scherer
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151096
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Financial markets are often fragmented, introducing the possibility that
quotes in identical securities may become crossed or locked. There are a
number of theoretical explanations for the existence of crossed and
locked quotes, including competition, simultaneous actions, inattentiveness, fee structure and market access. In this paper, we
perform a simulation experiment designed to examine the effect of simple
order routing procedures on the properties of a fragmented market
consisting of a single security trading in two independent limit order
books. The quotes in the two markets are connected solely by the routing
decision of the market participants. We report on the health of the
consolidated market as measured by the duration of crossed and locked
states, as well as the spread and the volatility of transaction prices
in the consolidated market. We aim to quantify exactly how the
prevalence of order routing among a population of market participants
affects properties of the consolidated market. Our model contributes to
the zero-intelligence literature by treating order routing as an
experimental variable. Additionally, we introduce a parsimonious
heuristic for limit order routing, allowing us to study the effects of
both market order routing and limit order routing. Our model refines
intuition for the sometimes subtle relationships between the prevalence
of order routing and various market measures. Our model also provides a
benchmark for more complex agent-based models.
Tags
Model
zero intelligence
Financial-markets
Price
Nasdaq