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Money, Banking

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The Theory and Practice of Equity ... Mkt. Lmt. Total. In ... 25 0.25 36.30 33.94 -0.02 0.39 0.56 2.00 2.00 438.00 1.00 109.50 0.25 36.36 34.10 4.94E-03 0.93 -0 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Money, Banking


1
Money, Banking FinanceLecture 4
  • The Theory and Practice of Equity Trading

2
Aims
  • Examine the process by which investment decisions
    are translated into the action of buying or
    selling shares.
  • Understand how a trading environment operates and
    how the players interact.
  • Appreciate how the actions of traders influence
    the market.
  • Examine the Trader-Ex software for training of
    stock-market traders.

3
Trading and Investing
  • Important distinction between Investing and
    Trading.
  • Trading is about converting an investment
    decision at the least cost point.
  • Trading is also about price discovery. The
    investment manager will have an idea of the
    equilibrium price but this could change in a
    dynamic and fast moving situation.
  • Trading is also about finding price discrepancies
    and exploiting these for profit

4
Investment Decisions
Time Taken by Fund Managers to make buy/sell
decision
5 4 3 2 1 Mean frequency
lt 1 hr 3.1 6.2 13.8 46.1 30.8 2.05
1 hr 1 day 7.7 9.2 41.6 24.6 17.0 2.66
1 day 1 wk 10.7 32.3 27.7 20.0 9.2 3.15
1 wk 1 m 7.5 40.9 21.2 18.2 12.1 3.14
1 m 15.2 22.7 19.7 24.2 18.2 2.92
Score 5 very frequently (75 100 of the
time) 1 never Source Schwartz R and Steil B
(2002), Controlling Institutional Trading Costs
We have met the enemy and it is us, Journal of
Portfolio Management, 23, 3, 39-49
5
Trading and Time
  • Investment decisions are made in discrete time.
  • Trading decisions are made in continuous time.
  • Once a decision to invest has been activated to a
    trade, time takes on a different meaning.
  • The trader wants to satisfy the instruction
    before the end of the trading day and show a good
    performance.
  • Performance can be measured in terms of
    opportunity cost and/or actual cash surplus.

6
Bid-Ask Spread
  • A bid order is an offer made by a trader to BUY a
    security.
  • An ask order is the price a trader is willing to
    SELL a security. Sometimes called the OFFER
    price.
  • A bid or an ask can stipulate the amount the
    trader will buy or sell and this is called a
    LIMIT ORDER.
  • A market sell is a willingness to accept a bid
    order and a market buy is a willingness to accept
    an ask.

7
Order Arrival
  • Orders to buy and sell will arrive during the
    market day.
  • The Trader may be a short-term trader with orders
    to work for a client or working for a pension
    fund or hedge fund.
  • Traders dont have the luxury of time. Their
    decision is to buy sell or wait
  • To gauge the market the balance of buy and sell
    orders
  • At above equilibrium prices the arrival rate of
    sell orders are faster than the arrival rate of
    buy orders.
  • Similarly at prices below some notional
    equilibrium, the arrival rate of buys are greater
    than sells.

8
Price Discovery
P
9
Informed Traders
  • Informed Traders agents who trade knowing that
    the current price level has diverged from the
    fundamental.
  • Buy orders are sent to market if P gt P
  • Sell orders are made when P lt P. When P gt
    P(offer) or P lt P(bid).
  • In the theoretical world of costless trading,
    complete markets, instantaneous information
    dissemination, price adjustments are
    instantaneous.
  • In reality prices adjust rapidly with new news,
    but news could be changes in fundamentals,
    uncertainty, rumour or noise.
  • The informed Trader will exploit information and
    act with a short lag to news about fundamentals.

10
P and Best Bid and Offer Quotes
11
Liquidity Traders
  • Idiosyncratic reasons for trade.
  • Orders are two-sided. They can be market orders
    or limit orders and arrive randomly.
  • Sometimes called noise traders.
  • Liquidity traders differ in that they issue both
    market and limit orders but informed traders
    submit market orders only.
  • Liquidity traders will not drive a price back to
    some previous level or reinforce a trend because
    informed traders drive the price to equilibrium.

12
Technical (Momentum) Traders
  • These Traders are prevalent in the market.
  • Market technician using chartist analysis
  • Algo trader using a black-box device
  • Arbitrageur exploit price inefficiencies to
    profit.
  • Market maker or Day Trader profiting from the
    bid-ask spread or profiting from changing market
    conditions to buy low and sell high.

13
What Drives a Market?
Liquidity Order Flow
Momentum
Informed
Quotes, Prices, Volume
Trading Mechanism Order Book, Market Makers, Call
Auction
14
TraderEX Purpose
  • Make trading decisions
  • Understand price discovery
  • 3) Evaluate trading rules for
  • market participants
  • market quality
  • intermediaries and dealer roles
  • 4) Compare alternative market systems
  • 5) Have Fun

15
Computers Role
  • Establish market background
  • Generate order flow
  • Update display and bid-ask quotes
  • 2) Give participants orders to execute
  • 3) Maintain transactions records for subsequent
    analysis on
  • Participants order placement decisions
  • Market quality (e.g., bid-ask spread)

16
Teaching Trading and Markets with TraderEx
simulations (I)
e.g., cardiff2
cardiff
17
Teaching Trading and Markets with TraderEx
simulations (II)
18
(No Transcript)
19
Buy orders
Market orders
Limit orders
Sell orders
20
Order book market
Ask 213 offered at 20.60
20.40 Bid for 59
21
Entering a limit order
User has entered 2 limit orders to sell
22
User is entering a market order to sell
Click to cancel your limit order to sell 10 at
19.90
(44) units ahead of your 10
23
Sold!
Mark-to-market PL -2.00
24
The Order Driven Market in TraderEx
Days High Price
Your limit orders to sell
Ask 46 offered at 20.00
40 units ahead of your 10
Ticker of trades
25
Can enter Chat messages
26
Performance measures1) Average prices
27
Performance measures2) PL
28
Performance measures3) VWAP
29
Market Structures
  • Order-driven Buy-side trader with large order
  • Quote-driven Market maker/ liquidity provider
  • Order book w/ Periodic call auction (3x day)
  • Order book w/ Dark liquidity pool

30
Order driven market
Buy-Side Trader (YOU)
Investment Managers Decision
Order Book Market
Trade Occurs
31
Performance
  • Average Cost
  • You purchased 140,000 shares at 3.5 cents below
    VWAP
  • But 23.6 cents above the last price of the day.
  • Your PL position is
  • -33

32
Buy side performance
  • PL per share
  • Mark-to-Market Price Average Purchase Cost
  • Good trading
  • VWAP Average Purchase Cost gt 0
  • Good stock selection
  • Last Price Price at time

33
Summary
  • We have seen that investing is not the same as
    trading
  • Investing is a strategic decision made by the
    portfolio manager.
  • Trading involves meeting the instructions of the
    portfolio manager at the least cost or best
    price.
  • The TraderEx software is a computer package that
    simulates trading in different market structures
  • It also allows for interactive trading in real
    time.
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