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Latency and liquidity provision in a limit order book

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  • Julius Bonart
  • Martin Gould

Abstract

We use a recent, high-quality data set from Nasdaq to perform an empirical analysis of order flow in a limit order book (LOB) before and after the arrival of a market order. For each of the stocks that we study, we identify a sequence of distinct phases across which the net flow of orders differs considerably. We note some of our results are consist with the widely reported phenomenon of stimulated refill, but that others are not. We therefore propose alternative mechanical and strategic motivations for the behaviour that we observe. Based on our findings, we argue that strategic liquidity providers consider both adverse selection and expected waiting costs when deciding how to act.

Suggested Citation

  • Julius Bonart & Martin Gould, 2015. "Latency and liquidity provision in a limit order book," Papers 1511.04116, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2016.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1511.04116
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Antoine Jacquier & Hao Liu, 2017. "Optimal liquidation in a Level-I limit order book for large tick stocks," Papers 1701.01327, arXiv.org, revised Nov 2017.

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