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How to Open a Financial Market when Institutional Traders are Present Michael S. Pagano Villanova University [email protected] 1 Is trading this simple? … 2 or slightly more difficult ?? 3 What Motivates Trading? 1. New information (news) 2. Liquidity needs 3. Divergent expectations (people agree to disagree) 4. Technical (noise) trading 4 Fundamental Financing Channels Firm Firm Investor IB / CB Buyer Investor Seller Agent Agent Exchange or Market Maker 5 Purposes of Financial Markets • Set Prices for financial assets • Exchange Information • Raise Capital for Issuers (Primary Mkt) • Liquidity for Investors (Secondary Mkt) • Vehicle for Managing Risk 6 Major Trading Issues • Liquidity • Price & Quantity Discovery • Volatility • Transaction Costs • Trading Profits for Market Makers • Net Investment Returns 7 Order Revelation in a Financial Market “Bookbuilding” is the process of: – revealing orders and/or trades, – forming an active market with numerous traders, – discovering the asset’s price (price discovery), and – deepening the order “book” and/or building trading volume (quantity discovery). 8 Challenges of Order Revelation • It is not a simple process. • Existence of an order is information that can be used against the trader submitting the order (i.e., it is like a “free” option given to other traders). • Adverse price changes can occur due to: – Market Impact of large orders, – Front-running, and – Mis-pricing of early orders. 9 Challenges for Large Traders • Large, institutional traders know that their actions can impact market prices. • Large traders are more likely to suffer “ex post” regret about their trades. • Therefore, many large traders do not fully reveal their order sizes, thus creating strong, latent demand to buy and/or sell. 10 A Two-Sided Market with Unequal Orders 11 “Most Inefficient” Outcome via Order Shading 12 “Most Efficient” Outcome via Open Book 13 Building to an Efficient Outcome with Multiple Orders 14 The Iceberg of Transaction Costs Commission 5 ¢ (17 bp) Impact 10 ¢ (34 bp) Delay 23 ¢ (77 bp) Missed Trades 9 ¢ (29 bp) Source: Plexus Group, 2003 15 Orders Come from 3 Types of Traders Informed Liquidity Order Flow Technical Trading P* Quotes, Prices, Volume Is p*>offer or p*<bid? Do the informed Traders agree with each other? maybe not! Trading Mechanism Is there a trend/ pattern? De-Briefing: P*, Best Bid and Offer Quotes, and Price Impact $28.00 $27.00 $26.00 $25.00 $24.00 Ask $23.00 P* $22.00 $21.00 Bid Day 1 Day 2 18 Key Questions • How did you do in terms of achieving your goal? (e.g., did you get the shares at a “good” price?) • What types of orders / trading strategies worked best? Which worked worst? • What do you think caused the bid-ask prices to diverge from the equilibrium P* values? • Did you shade your orders or did you feel comfortable submitting large orders? 19