Abstract
Market fragmentation and technology have given rise to new trading strategies. One of them is to supply liquidity simultaneously across multiple trading venues, which requires multi-venue management of inventory risk. We build an inventory model in which order ow fragments across two venues, and show that multi-venue market-makers might consolidate the fragmented order ow, leading to lower transaction costs. We also show that multi-venue market-making strategies result in interrelated spreads. We empirically investigate the main predictions of our model using Euronext proprietary data that contain member's orders and trades identities for multi-listed firms. We find evidence of cross-venue inventory control, in particular for formally registered market-makers. We also find that bid-ask spreads vary with inventories of multi-venue market-makers and the way order ow fragments across all venues, as uniquely predicted by our model.
Keywords
Market fragmentation; multi-venue market-making; bid-ask spreads;
Replaced by
Laurence Daures-Lescouret, and Sophie Moinas, “Fragmentation and Strategic Market-Making”, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, vol. 58, n. 4, June 2023, pp. 1675–1700.
Reference
Laurence Lescourret, and Sophie Moinas, “Liquidity Supply across Multiple Trading Venues”, TSE Working Paper, n. 14-533, October 2014, revised March 2015.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 14-533, October 2014, revised March 2015