The simple empirical credit models
In the foregoing articles we have seen that in the short run, the prices of financial instruments may deviate from their fundamental value on account of microstructure frictions such as bid–ask bounce, inventory control and order imbalances. Previous article introduced empirical models for estimating transaction costs and the price impact of a trade. These models were quite simple: they assumed that the price impact of a trade was immediate. In reality, this is not always so, and there may be lagged effects or slow adjustments. We therefore need a richer dynamic structure in order to model prices and trades on financial markets. In this chapter, we introduce dynamic timeseries models for prices and trades, and show how they can be used to describe the market’s convergence on the new equilibrium price after a shock.
This article extends the simple empirical models of Chapter 6 to a full dynamic setting. We show how time-series models for prices and trades can be used to study these questions. Throughout the chapter, we focus more on the structure and interpretation of the models than on the econometric and sampling issues that often arise in estimating dynamic time series using microstructure data. Section 9.1 introduces a dynamic model for prices and order flow, with lagged effects of order flow on prices and order-flow dynamics. Section 9.2 generalizes that model to the vector autoregressive model, which was introduced into microstructure by Hasbrouck (1988, 1991, 1993, 1995) and has since become the standard reference model in the literature. We then turn to a formal decomposition of prices into permanent and transitory components, where the permanent component is interpreted as the equilibrium value of the
asset, or the efficient price. Section 9.3 examines price discovery, i.e. the process of convergence on the efficient price, and the role of order flow in this process. Section 9.4 studies price discovery for securities that are traded in multiple market-places. The appendix gives some tools for dealing with dynamic econometric models and lag polynomials.
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