Price Improvement in Dealership Markets
Journal of Business, Forthcoming
39 Pages Posted: 4 Oct 2001
Abstract
Price improvement refers to the practice whereby dealers offer executions that improve on quoted prices. Why are these improvements given? Standard thinking is that competition causes dealers to give better prices to customers with less information. This paper contrasts this with a novel theory in which customers negotiate improvements and differential pricing arises from differences in customers' market power. Each theory impacts the formation of bid/ask spreads in empirically distinguishable ways. Understanding price improvement and its impact on market participants is critical the regulation of markets, particularly since equal execution is such an important stated goal of the SEC.
Keywords: Price Improvement, dealer market, microstructure, auction
JEL Classification: G10, G15, G19
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Do Inventories Matter in Dealership Markets? Evidence from the London Stock Exchange
By Oliver Hansch, S. Viswanathan, ...
-
Preferencing, Internalization, Best Execution and Dealer Profits
By Oliver Hansch, S. Viswanathan, ...
-
Transaction Costs in Dealer Markets: Evidence from the London Stock Exchange
By Peter C. Reiss and Ingrid M. Werner
-
Optimal Transparency in a Dealership Market with an Application to Foreign Exchange
-
Round-the-Clock Trading: Evidence from U.K. Cross-Listed Securities
By Allan W. Kleidon and Ingrid M. Werner
-
Do Dealer Firms Manage Inventory on a Stock-by-Stock or a Portfolio Basis?
By Narayan Y. Naik and Pradeep K. Yadav
-
By Narayan Y. Naik and Pradeep K. Yadav
-
The Changing Microstructure of European Equity Markets
By Marco Pagano
-
By Narayan Y. Naik and Pradeep K. Yadav