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Duplicated Orders, Swift Cancellations, and Fast Market Making in Fragmented Markets

Author

Listed:
  • Degryse, Hans

    (DePaul University)

  • De Winne, Rudy

    (Université catholique de Louvain, LIDAM/LFIN, Belgium)

  • Gresse, Carole

    (Université catholique de Louvain, LIDAM/LFIN, Belgium)

  • Payne, Richard

Abstract

Employing unique data from 91 stocks trading on their primary exchanges and three alternative venues, we show that liquidity suppliers post duplicate limit orders on competing trading venues and cancel the duplicated orders immediately after one of them is filled. This is consistent with liquidity suppliers engaging in crossvenue market making. This duplicated-then-canceled liquidity is predominantly used by high-frequency traders when their inventories are not excessive. It reduces execution costs of fast traders on alternative venues. It, however, has some adverse impact on execution costs on primary exchanges, but those negative effects fail to outweigh the liquidity benefits of market fragmentation.

Suggested Citation

  • Degryse, Hans & De Winne, Rudy & Gresse, Carole & Payne, Richard, 2025. "Duplicated Orders, Swift Cancellations, and Fast Market Making in Fragmented Markets," LIDAM Reprints LFIN 2025014, Université catholique de Louvain, Louvain Finance (LFIN).
  • Handle: RePEc:ajf:louvlr:2025014
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.01789
    Note: In: Management Science, 2025
    as

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