The Trader's Dilemma: Trading Strategies and Endogenous Pricing in an Illiquid Market

61 Pages Posted: 18 Mar 2005

See all articles by Dan Liang

Dan Liang

School of Economics, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics

Frank Milne

Queen's University - Department of Economics

Date Written: November 13, 2005

Abstract

We investigate a large trader's trading strategies in a decentralized market, in which all traders are subject to type switching. The large trader has pressure to liquidate her position by the end of the horizon to avoid extra holding costs. She faces a trade-off: if she trades quickly, she moves the price too much; if she trades slowly, she may not be able to find counterparties in the market in later periods. We derive subgame perfect equilibria under three different spot market structures. The structures are chosen to show various degrees of competitive bargaining. We show that in each equilibrium the large trader chooses the optimal trading strategy to take into account both the price impact effect and liquidity uncertainty. Thus asset prices are generated endogenously through a dynamic bargaining and trading process and reflect the impact of the large trader's trades. Small traders, who possess little market power, cannot be ignored because their reactions to the large trader's trading strategy jointly determines market liquidity. We show that limiting competitive pricing occurs when there are enough small traders, or there are many trading periods. Illiquidity is generated by the thin market for buyers, and their limited capacity to buy the asset sold by the large trader.

Keywords: illiquidity discount, trading strategies, dynamic bargaining and trading game

Suggested Citation

Liang, Dan and Milne, Frank, The Trader's Dilemma: Trading Strategies and Endogenous Pricing in an Illiquid Market (November 13, 2005). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=682347 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.682347

Dan Liang (Contact Author)

School of Economics, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics ( email )

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Frank Milne

Queen's University - Department of Economics ( email )

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