About GSCSInformation about our servicesiteroresearch and background section selectednews from GSCSContact us

The information content of the trading process
David Easley, Nicholas M Kiefer, Maureen O'Hara

Journal of Empirical Finance Volume 4 (1997)

Abstract
The trade process is a stochastic process of transactions interspersed with periods of inactivity. The realizations of this process are a source of information to market participants. They cause prices to move as they affect the market maker's beliefs about the value of the stock. We fit a model of the trade process that allows us to ask whether trade size is important, in that large and small trades may have different information content (they do, but this varies across stocks); whether uninformed trade is i.i.d. (it is not); and, whether large buys and large sells are equally informative (they differ only marginally). The model is fitted by maximum likelihood using transactions data on six stocks over 60 days.

For more information about this article and other related articles click here.

You may need to register to obtain the full article.



Back to list

Landscape image