PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Private exchanges may drive more informed investors to public markets

New paper suggests private exchanges actually increase the ratio of well-informed investors participating in public markets

2014-02-03
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Abby Abazorius
abbya@mit.edu
617-253-2709
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Private exchanges may drive more informed investors to public markets New paper suggests private exchanges actually increase the ratio of well-informed investors participating in public markets A "dark pool" may sound like a mysterious water source or an untapped oil well. In reality, it's a finance term: Dark pools are privately run stock markets that do not show participants' orders to the public before trades happen. They are a growing presence in stock trading, now representing at least one-eighth, and possibly much more, of all stock trading volume in the U.S.

But what is the effect of dark pools on "price discovery" — that is, the ongoing setting of prices on markets, which is thought to benefit from the transparency provided by public exchanges? At least one survey has shown that a clear majority of finance professionals — 71 percent — think dark pools are "somewhat" or "very" problematic in establishing stock prices.

But a new paper by an MIT professor, to be published in the Review of Financial Studies, asserts that this is not necessarily the case. Dark pools, it says, can actually help price discovery in the right circumstances. They do this, in part, by attracting less-informed traders, while better-informed traders — who may place a premium on acting quickly to execute trades — may be unable to fill their orders in smaller dark pools, and head back to the public exchanges to do business.

"The dark pool is like a screening device that siphons off uninformed traders," says Haoxiang Zhu, a financial economist at the MIT Sloan School of Management, the author of the new paper. "In the end, on the [public] exchange, you get left with a higher concentration of the informed traders who contribute to price discovery."

Not enough liquid in the pools

Dark pools are believed to have originated in the 1980s, but have gained much more traction in the last half-decade. A 2009 study by the Securities and Exchange Commission estimated that 32 such dark pools, some run by prominent financial firms, represented about 8 percent of stock trades; a consulting firm, the Tabb Group, and a brokerage, Rosenblatt Securities, estimated in 2011 that dark pools handle 12 percent of U.S. trading volume. Along with that growth has come concerns about transparency problems in the markets.

"The usual intuition is that dark pools harm price discovery in the public venues, because people who have information [might] go hide in the dark," Zhu observes.

For investors, the appeal of trading in a dark pool is the ability to make transactions without moving the market. Consider a well-informed investor with good information about firms — say a large institutional investor, such as a mutual fund. Suppose such an investor is buying some of its shares in a public company. Doing so in a dark pool might be appealing, because buying those shares in a public exchange might create an impact on the price that would make executing the investor's remaining orders more costly.

However, Zhu's paper, based on a model of trading behavior, implies that the risk for investors of not being able to execute transactions in dark pools is a principal factor limiting the harm they might do to price discovery on public exchanges. To see why, consider that Zhu's model includes both well-informed investors, acting on the basis of detailed knowledge about a stock, and as well as less-informed investors — trading due to, say, a need to rebalance a portfolio.

Now, if multiple well-informed investors arrive at the same conclusion about a company's stock — say, that the firm's quarterly earnings will rise and that buying is a good idea — they will rush to the dark pools to attempt trades. But many of those smart investors will discover liquidity problems in the dark pool: They crowd on one side of the market, and there may not be enough underinformed investors willing to take the other side of the trade. Needing to execute the trade promptly, the well-informed investors hurry back to the public stock exchanges in a greater proportion than the less-informed traders.

"If [well-informed traders] do not get their orders filled, their information becomes stale," Zhu says.

The aggregate information generating price discovery on the public stock exchanges will thus be more accurate on average when dark pools are part of the process.

"It is basically a signal-to-noise argument," Zhu says.

Making models and seeking facts

To be clear, Zhu's paper is based on a model of investor behavior. He also provides some caveats about his findings: For example, if dark pools use opaque rules, well-informed investors may not rush back to public exchanges as quickly. Moreover, better price discovery can coincide with worse liquidity, in the form of wider bid-ask spreads and higher price impacts on exchanges.

Still, as he notes, "Modeling forces us to have discipline in interpreting the data."

Currently Zhu is at work on two additional research papers about dark pools — one theoretical, and another empirical. The theoretical study models dark-pool trading with large sizes of trades; the empirical study aims to evaluate the relationship between dark pools and high-frequency computerized trading.

### Written by Peter Dizikes, MIT News Office


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NASA's Aqua satellite tracking System 94P or 'Fletcher' near Queensland

2014-02-03
A tropical low pressure area known as "System 94P" has tracked across western Queensland and moved into the Gulf of Carpentaria between Karumba and Gilbert River Mouth on February 3 as NASA's ...

Gene mutation defines brain tumors that benefit from aggressive surgery

2014-02-03
Astrocytomas are the most common malignant brain tumors. While most patients' tumors prove to be ...

For infants, stress may be caught, not taught

2014-02-03
New research shows that babies not only pick up on their mother's stress, they also show corresponding physiological changes. "Our research shows that infants 'catch' and embody the physiological ...

Tighter economic regulation needed to reverse obesity epidemic -- study

2014-02-03
This news release is available in Spanish, French, and Arabic. Geneva, 3 February 2014. Governments could slow – and even ...

First African study on biodiversity in genetically modified maize finds insects abundant

2014-02-03
Previous studies from ...

Beneficial insects, nematodes not harmed by genetically modified, insect-resistant crops

2014-02-03
A large body of literature has shown that genetically-modified plants that produce proteins from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) to protect themselves ...

Vitamin C and E supplements hampers endurance training

2014-02-03
Vitamin C and E supplements may blunt the improvement of muscular endurance – by disrupting cellular adaptions in exercised muscles – suggests a new study published today [3 February] in The Journal of Physiology. As vitamin ...

A quicker, cheaper way to detect staph in the body

2014-02-03
Chances are you won't know you've got a staph infection until the test results come in, days after the symptoms first appear. But what if your ...

Red alert: Body kills 'spontaneous' blood cancers on a daily basis

2014-02-03
Immune cells undergo 'spontaneous' changes on a daily basis that could lead to cancers if not for the diligent surveillance of our immune system, Melbourne scientists have found. The ...

Stanford researchers discover how brain regions work together, or alone

2014-02-03
Stanford researchers ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New laser “comb” can enable rapid identification of chemicals with extreme precision

The “Mississippi Bubble” and the complex history of Haiti

Regular sleep schedule may improve recovery from heart failure, study finds

Wrinkles in atomically thin materials unlock ultraefficient electronics

Brain neurons are responsible for day-to-day control of blood sugar

Moffitt study uncovers new mechanism of immunotherapy resistance

Brain area 46 is at the center of a network for emotion regulation in marmosets

Self-morphing, wing-like feet enhance surface maneuverability of water striders and robots

Zooming in reveals a world of detail: breakthrough method unveils the inner workings of our cells

DNA from extinct hominin may have helped ancient peoples survive in the Americas

UC Irvine-led research team uncovers global wildfire paradox

Extinct human relatives left a genetic gift that helped people thrive in the Americas

Overinflated balloons: study reveals how cellular waste disposal system deals with stress

The rise of plant life changed how rivers move, Stanford study shows

What traits matter when predicting disease emergence in new populations?

Overcoming disordered energy in light-matter interactions

Zoo populations hold key to saving Pacific pocket mouse

Astronomers detect the brightest fast radio burst of all time

OET inaugural cover | 30 years of nanoimprint lithography: Leading the new era of nanomanufacturing

Metalens evolution: From individual devices to integrated arrays

Advancing disaster response with the EBD dataset

Putting solar panels in space could aid Europe’s net-zero transition

Ambient documentation technologies reduce physician burnout and restore ‘joy’ in medicine

Solar panels in space could cut Europe’s renewable energy needs by 80%

Computational approach meets biology to connect neural progenitor cells with human disorders

GLP-1 receptor agonists and cancer risk in adults with obesity

Impact of a weight loss intervention on 1-year weight change in women with stage II/III breast cancer

Novel tool helps identify key targets to strengthen CAR NK cell therapies

New RP-HPLC method for orlistat analysis validated

How AI will transform mental health support for patients with breast cancer

[Press-News.org] Private exchanges may drive more informed investors to public markets
New paper suggests private exchanges actually increase the ratio of well-informed investors participating in public markets