Volatility, Market Structure, and the Bid-Ask Spread
45 Pages Posted: 11 Jun 2008
Abstract
We test the conjecture that the specialist system on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) provides better liquidity services than the NASDAQ dealer market in times of high return volatility when adverse selection and inventory risks are high. We motivate our conjecture from the observation that there is a designated specialist for each stock on the NYSE who is directly responsible for maintaining a reasonable level of liquidity (i.e., the bid-ask spread) as the liquidity provider of last resort, whereas there is no such designated dealer on NASDAQ. Empirical evidence is consistent with our conjecture. In a similar vein, we show that the specialist system provides better liquidity than the dealer market in thin markets.
Keywords: Dealer, Specialist, Market structure, Bid-ask spreads, Fair and orderly markets
JEL Classification: G18, G19
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Value of the Designated Market Maker
By Kumar Venkataraman and Andy Waisburd
-
The Value of the Designated Market Maker
By Kumar Venkataraman and Andy Waisburd
-
Why Designate Market Makers? Affirmative Obligations and Market Quality
By Hendrik Bessembinder, Jia Hao, ...
-
The Anatomy of a Call Market: Evidence from Germany
By Carl-heinrich Kehr, Jan Pieter Krahnen, ...
-
Are Designated Market Makers Necessary in Centralized Limit Order Markets?
-
Market Makers as Information Providers: The Natural Experiment of STAR
By Pietro Perotti and Barbara Rindi
-
Specialists as Risk Managers: The Competition between Intermediated and Non-Intermediated Market
By Michael S. Pagano and Wen Mao