![PDF](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/008851237_1-312f226661195a48402dd2c4ecc05389-300x300.png)
Amendments to the Operational Clearing Procedures for
... Operational Clearing Procedures for Options Trading Exchange Participants ...
... Operational Clearing Procedures for Options Trading Exchange Participants ...
Decimalization, trading costs, and information transmission between
... the empirical results here. DeJong and Donders (1998) examine the relations between futures, options, and index levels, and find that futures significantly lead options and index returns. It is known that index returns are likely to be affected by the nonsynchronous trading problem; thus ETFs, which ...
... the empirical results here. DeJong and Donders (1998) examine the relations between futures, options, and index levels, and find that futures significantly lead options and index returns. It is known that index returns are likely to be affected by the nonsynchronous trading problem; thus ETFs, which ...
PDF
... institutions. The biggest drawback of volatility is the associated uncertainty of marketing production, investment in technology, innovation etc. Increasing risk would lead to inefficient resource allocation for producers, merchandisers, and speculators, it also has the potential to limit access to ...
... institutions. The biggest drawback of volatility is the associated uncertainty of marketing production, investment in technology, innovation etc. Increasing risk would lead to inefficient resource allocation for producers, merchandisers, and speculators, it also has the potential to limit access to ...
1 Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
... We now assume an idealized framework for an open market place, where all the risky assets refer to (say) all the tradeable stocks available to all. In addition we have a risk-free asset (for borrowing and/or lending in unlimited quantities) with interest rate rf . We assume that all information is a ...
... We now assume an idealized framework for an open market place, where all the risky assets refer to (say) all the tradeable stocks available to all. In addition we have a risk-free asset (for borrowing and/or lending in unlimited quantities) with interest rate rf . We assume that all information is a ...
Chap009
... Key Concepts and Skills Understand how stock prices depend on future dividends and dividend growth Be able to compute stock prices using the dividend growth model Understand how growth opportunities affect stock values Understand the PE ratio Understand how stock markets work ...
... Key Concepts and Skills Understand how stock prices depend on future dividends and dividend growth Be able to compute stock prices using the dividend growth model Understand how growth opportunities affect stock values Understand the PE ratio Understand how stock markets work ...
슬라이드 1 - Bond Pricing Agency Malaysia Sdn Bhd
... While the total number of fixed income securities issued totals over 2,000, on average less than 100 of them (less than 1 % of the total), are traded daily and the transactions are concentrated on government bonds. OTC market Unlike equities, It is difficult to obtain reliable price for fixed inco ...
... While the total number of fixed income securities issued totals over 2,000, on average less than 100 of them (less than 1 % of the total), are traded daily and the transactions are concentrated on government bonds. OTC market Unlike equities, It is difficult to obtain reliable price for fixed inco ...
handbill on eligibility to bid for government securities in the primary
... accounts of a financial institution. CAPITAL means the paid-in capital and surplus account. SURPLUS means the excess of the assets over the liabilities and paid-in capital of the financial institutions but excluding the reserves set aside for valuation purposes and reserves for liabilities and defer ...
... accounts of a financial institution. CAPITAL means the paid-in capital and surplus account. SURPLUS means the excess of the assets over the liabilities and paid-in capital of the financial institutions but excluding the reserves set aside for valuation purposes and reserves for liabilities and defer ...
The Impact of Serial Correlation on Option Prices in a Non
... impossible.1 The attempt to do so for individual stocks, as opposed to an index, would be, if anything, even more formidable. There is no reason to believe that individual option market makers or traders are any better at perfecting the impossible job of constructing perfect hedges than the largest ...
... impossible.1 The attempt to do so for individual stocks, as opposed to an index, would be, if anything, even more formidable. There is no reason to believe that individual option market makers or traders are any better at perfecting the impossible job of constructing perfect hedges than the largest ...
Wiener Processes and Ito`s Lemma
... in a variable depend only on where we are, not the history of how we got where we are We assume that stock prices follow Markov processes ...
... in a variable depend only on where we are, not the history of how we got where we are We assume that stock prices follow Markov processes ...
The Role of Positions and Activities In Derivative Pricing A
... The role of quantities (demands) can be analyzed analogously... ...
... The role of quantities (demands) can be analyzed analogously... ...
Information Aggregation and Allocative Efficiency in Smooth Markets
... will not generally be ex ante Pareto efficient. That is, we cannot exclude the possibility of other mechanisms that yield a higher ex ante expected utility to each agent. Further, we also note that our notion of ex post efficiency excludes the market maker. This is reasonable, as we do not model the ...
... will not generally be ex ante Pareto efficient. That is, we cannot exclude the possibility of other mechanisms that yield a higher ex ante expected utility to each agent. Further, we also note that our notion of ex post efficiency excludes the market maker. This is reasonable, as we do not model the ...
2010 Flash Crash
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/2010_flash_crash.jpg?width=300)
The May 6, 2010, Flash Crash also known as The Crash of 2:45, the 2010 Flash Crash or simply the Flash Crash, was a United States trillion-dollar stock market crash, which started at 2:32 and lasted for approximately 36 minutes. Stock indexes, such as the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq 100, collapsed and rebounded very rapidly.The Dow Jones Industrial Average had its biggest intraday point drop (from the opening) up to that point, plunging 998.5 points (about 9%), most within minutes, only to recover a large part of the loss. It was also the second-largest intraday point swing (difference between intraday high and intraday low) up to that point, at 1,010.14 points. The prices of stocks, stock index futures, options and ETFs were volatile, thus trading volume spiked. A CFTC 2014 report described it as one of the most turbulent periods in the history of financial markets.On April 21, 2015, nearly five years after the incident, the U.S. Department of Justice laid ""22 criminal counts, including fraud and market manipulation"" against Navinder Singh Sarao, a trader. Among the charges included was the use of spoofing algorithms; just prior to the Flash Crash, he placed thousands of E-mini S&P 500 stock index futures contracts which he planned on canceling later. These orders amounting to about ""$200 million worth of bets that the market would fall"" were ""replaced or modified 19,000 times"" before they were canceled. Spoofing, layering and front-running are now banned.The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) investigation concluded that Sarao ""was at least significantly responsible for the order imbalances"" in the derivatives market which affected stock markets and exacerbated the flash crash. Sarao began his alleged market manipulation in 2009 with commercially available trading software whose code he modified ""so he could rapidly place and cancel orders automatically."" Traders Magazine journalist, John Bates, argued that blaming a 36-year-old small-time trader who worked from his parents' modest stucco house in suburban west London for sparking a trillion-dollar stock market crash is a little bit like blaming lightning for starting a fire"" and that the investigation was lengthened because regulators used ""bicycles to try and catch Ferraris."" Furthermore, he concluded that by April 2015, traders can still manipulate and impact markets in spite of regulators and banks' new, improved monitoring of automated trade systems.As recently as May 2014, a CFTC report concluded that high-frequency traders ""did not cause the Flash Crash, but contributed to it by demanding immediacy ahead of other market participants.""Recent research shows that Flash Crashes are not isolated occurrences, but have occurred quite often over the past century. For instance, Irene Aldridge, the author of High-Frequency Trading: A Practical Guide to Algorithmic Strategies and Trading Systems, 2nd ed., Wiley & Sons, shows that Flash Crashes have been frequent and their causes predictable in market microstructure analysis.