Rating: ****
Tags: Lang:en
Publisher: World Scientific Pub Co Inc
Added: August 26, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
This book exposes and comments on the consequences of Reg
NMS and MiFID on market microstructure. It covers changes in
market design, electronic trading, and investor and trader
behaviors. The emergence of high frequency trading and
critical events like the"Flash Crash" of 2010 are also
analyzed in depth. Using a quantitative viewpoint, this book
explains how an attrition of liquidity and regulatory changes
can impact the whole microstructure of financial markets. A
mathematical Appendix details the quantitative tools and
indicators used through the book, allowing the reader to go
further independently. This book is written by practitioners
and theoretical experts and covers practical aspects (like
the optimal infrastructure needed to trade electronically in
modern markets) and abstract analyses (like the use on
entropy measurements to understand the progress of market
fragmentation). As market microstructure is a recent academic
field, students will benefit from the book's overview of the
current state of microstructure and will use the Appendix to
understand important methodologies. Policy makers and
regulators will use this book to access theoretical analyses
on real cases. For readers who are practitioners, this book
delivers data analysis and basic processes like the designs
of Smart Order Routing and trade scheduling algorithms. In
this second edition, the authors have added a large section
on orderbook dynamics, showing how liquidity can predict
future price moves, and how High Frequency Traders can profit
from it. The section on market impact has also been updated
to show how buying or selling pressure moves prices not only
for a few hours, but even for days, and how prices relax (or
not) after a period of intense pressure. Further, this
edition includes pages on Dark Pools, Circuit Breakers and
added information outside of Equity Trading, because MiFID 2
is likely to push fixed income markets towards more
electronification. The authors explore what is to be expected
from this change in microstructure. The appendix has also
been augmented to include the propagator models (for intraday
price impact), a simple version of Kyle's model (1985) for
daily market impact, and a more sophisticated optimal trading
framework, to support the design of trading algorithms.
**