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Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications from the 2010 “Flash Crash” Dr. Michael Pagano, CFA The Robert J. and Mary Ellen Darretta Endowed Chair in Finance Professor of Finance Villanova School of Business May 12, 2011
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Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

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Page 1: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 1

MBA 8750 – Current Topics SeminarThe Current State and Structure of U.S.

Financial Markets: Implications from the 2010 “Flash Crash”

Dr. Michael Pagano, CFAThe Robert J. and Mary Ellen Darretta

Endowed Chair in FinanceProfessor of Finance

Villanova School of Business

May 12, 2011

Page 2: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 2

Overview of SeminarAgenda Item Presenter Time

Welcome & Introduction to the Seminar Mike Pagano 6:00-6:05

The “Flash Crash” and what it means for you and your firm

Mike Pagano 6:05-6:30

Open Outcry Trading Exercise All 6:30-6:50

The Role of Options in Investing and Markets Lou DePaul 6:50-8:00

How Trading Firms can add value for Investors Mike Pagano and All 8:00-8:45

Wrap-up and Post-Work Mike Pagano 8:45-9:00

Page 3: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity3

Is trading this simple? …

Page 4: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity4

or slightly more difficult ??

Page 5: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity5

What Motivates Trading?

1. New information (unexpected news)

2. Liquidity needs

3. Divergent expectations (people agree to disagree)

4. Technical (noise) trading

Page 6: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 6

Fundamental Financing ChannelsFirm Investor

Firm InvestorIB / CB

Buyer Seller

Agent

Exchange

or Market Maker

Agent

Page 7: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 7

The Equity Markets

U.S. Equity Market Centers National Markets: NYSE, Nasdaq, BATS, DirectEdge

Regional Exchanges: Boston, Chicago, National, Pacific, and Philadelphia

Over-the-Counter Market (OTC) Alternative Markets (ATSs, ECNs, “Dark Pools”), e.g.:

– INET (ECN part of Nasdaq now)– Arca (part of NYSE Euronext now) – POSIT (Investment Technology Group)– Liquidnet and Pipeline (private block trading networks)– Sell-side Dark Pools run by Goldman, Credit Suisse, etc.

Page 8: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 8

Trading Players

• Retail Investors• Institutional Investors• High Frequency Traders (HFTs)• Speculators• Dealers / Market Makers• Brokers• Exchanges• Off-Exchange Trading Systems• Corporate Issuers• Regulators

Page 9: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 9

Major Trading Issues

• Liquidity

• Informative Prices

• Volatility

• Transaction Costs

• Trading Profits

• Net Investment Returns

Page 10: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 10

The Iceberg of Transaction Costs

Source: Plexus Group, 2003

Commission 5 ¢ (17 bp)

ImpactImpact10 ¢ (34 bp)10 ¢ (34 bp)

Delay23 ¢ (77 bp)

Missed Trades9 ¢ (29 bp)

Page 11: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 11

Trading Cost Components• Total Cost = Commission

+ Impact (intra-day) + Delay (inter-day)

approx. 157 bps (one-way)

314 bps (round-trip!)

• What is the cumulative impact on a 10% gross annual return over just 1 year?

• Answer: Net return is only 6.57% (a 34.2% decrease!)

Page 12: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 12

10:50 10:55 11:00

PublicBuyer

PublicSeller

LimitOrder

Executes

Placesa BuyLimit

Order

Order Driven Market

The limit order book brings

buyer& seller together

The limit order book brings

buyer& seller together

Page 13: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 13

BIDS PRICE OFFERS

11.30 91

11.25 0

11.20 52

11.15 24

11.10 7

11.05

11.00

35 10.95

70 10.90

0 10.85

20 10.80

67 10.75

39 10.70

46 10.65

The Limit Order Book

Bid – Ask Spread(10.95 - 11.10)

Air Pocket

Air Pocket

Page 14: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 14$21.00

$22.00

$23.00

$24.00

$25.00

$26.00

$27.00

$28.00

Ask

Bid

P*

Day 1 Day 2

P* and Best Bid and Offer Quotes

Page 15: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 15

Order Flow is “Fuel” For a Market

Order Flow = Liquidity

An excellent system will not operate if it does not receive

Critical Mass Order Flow“Order flow attracts order flow”

Page 16: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 16

Liquidity

Main Attributes of a liquid asset Breadth: orders on the book exist at an array of

prices in the close neighborhood above and below the price at which shares are currently trading.

Depth: orders are of large size. Resiliency: price changes due to temporary order

imbalances quickly attract new orders to the market, thereby restoring reasonable share values.

Frequent trading (at high speed).

Page 17: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 17

The Raison d’être of Algorithmic Trading

o Dynamic price discovery

o The fast speed in which events can occur

o Exploit Market inefficiencies to ↓ costs and ↑ profits

Page 18: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 18

The 9/30/2010 CFTC - SEC “Flash Crash” Report

Page 19: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 19

Flash Crash Summary of EventsThe events of May 6 can be separated into 5 phases (shown in Figures 1.1

and 1.2 on following slides):• Phase 1: From the market’s open through about 2:32 p.m., prices were

broadly declining across markets, with stock market index products sustaining losses of about 3%.

• Phase 2: From about 2:32 p.m. through about 2:41 p.m., the broad markets began to lose more ground, declining another 1-2%.

• Phase 3: Between 2:41 p.m. and 2:45:28 p.m., lasting only about four minutes or so, volume spiked upwards and the broad markets plummeted a further 5-6% to reach intra-day lows of 9-10%.

• Phase 4: From 2:45 p.m. to about 3:00 p.m., broad market indices recovered while at the same time many individual securities and ETFs experienced extreme price fluctuations and traded in a disorderly fashion at prices as low as one penny or as high as $100,000.

• Phase 5: At about 3:00 p.m., prices of most individual securities significantly recovered and trading resumed in a more orderly fashion.

Page 20: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 20

More on the Flash Crash…

1. STOCK INDEX PRODUCTS: THE E-MINI FUTURES CONTRACT AND “SPY” EXCHANGE TRADED FUND (ETF)

2. A LOSS OF LIQUIDITY IN THE E-MINI AND “SPY” ETF MARKETS

3. AUTOMATED EXECUTION OF A LARGE SELL ORDER IN THE E-MINI FUTURES CONTRACT

4. CROSS-MARKET PROPAGATION (FUTURES TO CASH MARKETS)

5. LIQUIDITY IN THE INDIVIDUAL STOCKS THAT COMPRISE THE S&P 500 INDEX

Page 21: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 21

Key Graphs from CFTC / SEC Flash Crash Report

Page 22: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 22

Key Graphs from Joint Flash Crash Report (cont.)

Page 23: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 23

Key Graphs from Joint Flash Crash Report (cont.)

Page 24: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 24

Key Graphs from Joint Flash Crash Report (cont.)

Page 25: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 25

Key Graphs from Joint Flash Crash Report (cont.)

Page 26: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 26

Key Graphs from Joint Flash Crash Report (cont.)

Page 27: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 27

Key Graphs from Joint Flash Crash Report (cont.)

Page 28: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 28

Key Regulatory Topics

HFT and Market Stability (limit up/dn; breakers)

Reg NMS and Market Fragmentation

Level Playing Field: NYSE, Nasdaq, ECNs, ATS

Fairness for Retail vs. Institutional Investors

Insider Trading and Increased Surveillance

Mergers of For-Profit Exchanges / ATS firms

Impact on Corporate Issuers (e.g., WACC, prices)

Page 29: Market Structure, Trading, and LiquiditySlide 1 MBA 8750 – Current Topics Seminar The Current State and Structure of U.S. Financial Markets: Implications.

Market Structure, Trading, and Liquidity Slide 29

Homework Assignment

Written deliverable (reflection paper on pre-work and in-class activities) to be graded by Prof. Pagano.

The assignment will be to discuss the concepts and experiences from this class that were most salient to your own personal investments and / or your firm’s situation.

Please limit your response to 350 to 500 words (i.e., 1-2 pages, double-spaced with 12 point font size).