How Well Do Adverse Selection Components Measure Adverse Selection?

33 Pages Posted: 24 Oct 2001

See all articles by Bonnie F. Van Ness

Bonnie F. Van Ness

University of Mississippi - Department of Finance

Robert A. Van Ness

University of Mississippi - Department of Finance

Richard S. Warr

North Carolina State University

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Abstract

We examine the performance of five adverse selection models by comparing their component estimates to other measures of information asymmetry and informed trading. The models produce mixed results. Adverse selection components correlate with various volatility measures, but appear unrelated to measures of uncertainty. We find that only three of the five models have the expected relation with our informed trader proxies, suggesting that the adverse selection models measure adverse selection weakly at best. We also find that spread relates to many of the volatility measures, suggesting that some adverse selection components might be measuring some other cost of trading.

Suggested Citation

Van Ness, Bonnie F. and Van Ness, Robert A. and Warr, Richard S., How Well Do Adverse Selection Components Measure Adverse Selection?. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=282548 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.282548

Bonnie F. Van Ness

University of Mississippi - Department of Finance ( email )

Oxford, MS 38677
United States
662-915-6749 (Phone)
662-915-7968 (Fax)

Robert A. Van Ness (Contact Author)

University of Mississippi - Department of Finance ( email )

Oxford, MS 38677
United States

Richard S. Warr

North Carolina State University ( email )

BOX 7229
Raleigh, NC 27695-7229
United States
919-513-4646 (Phone)
919-515-6943 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www4.ncsu.edu/~rswarr/

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