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http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01g732d914w| Title: | THE IMPACT OF HIGH-FREQUENCY TRADING REGULATORY REGIMES ON EUROPEAN MARKET QUALITY |
| Authors: | Musella, Francis |
| Advisors: | Redding, Stephen |
| Department: | Economics |
| Class Year: | 2014 |
| Abstract: | I examine the impact of three different national regimes for regulating high-frequency trading: a licensure regime in Germany, establishment of an HFT order cancellation tax in Italy, and a combined order cancellation tax and general financial transactions tax in France. Using GARCH and EGARCH models, I find that the German regime significantly reduces the persistence of volatility shocks. The French regime significantly reduces long-run volatility, reduces the size of bid-ask spreads, and increases intraday volatility. It also weakly reduces volatility persistence and the sensitivity of bid-ask spreads to volatility. The Italian regime significantly reduces long-run volatility, increases the persistence of volatility shocks, increases intraday volatility, and reduces the sensitivity of bid-ask spreads to volatility. It weakly increases the size of bid-ask spreads. The French and German regimes were associated with a significant reduction in trade volume, which was not the case with the Italian regime. Overall, I find that the three regimes improve market quality more often than they detract from it. |
| Extent: | 64 pages |
| URI: | http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01g732d914w |
| Type of Material: | Princeton University Senior Theses |
| Language: | en_US |
| Appears in Collections: | Economics, 1927-2020 |
Files in This Item:
| File | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Musella_Francis.pdf | 904.81 kB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
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