"Optimal Liquidity Trading"

Gur Huberman, Werner Stanzl

© Review of Finance, 2005
Volume: 9 | Issue: 2 | Pages: 165-200

Publication type: Journal article

Research Archive Topic: Business Economics and Public Policy, Capital Markets and Investments, Corporate Finance

Abstract

A liquidity trader wishes to trade a ?xed number of shares within a certain time horizon and to minimize the mean and variance of the costs of trading. Explicit formulas for the optimal trading strategies show that risk-averse liquidity traders reduce their order sizes over time and execute a higher fraction of their total trading volume in early periods when price volatility or liquidity increases. In the presence of transaction fees, numerical simulations suggest that traders want to trade more frequently when price volatility goes up or liquidity declines. In the multi-asset case, price effects across assets have a substantial impact on trading behavior, as does continuous-time trading.

Each author name for a Columbia Business School faculty member is linked to a faculty research page, which lists additional publications by that faculty member.

Each topic is linked to an index of publications on that topic.

Contract

Add a new
Add a new