Financial Markets Structure, Institutions and Regulations: ECON 412
Financial Markets Structure, Institutions and Regulations: ECON 412
Financial Markets Structure, Institutions and Regulations: ECON 412
Course Description The course focuses on stock markets and their role in providing
financing. The first part of the course focuses on stock market microstructure, that is, how
secondary trading on stock exchanges is organized and regulated, and how this affects their
functioning in terms of liquidity, informational efficiency and other measures of
performance. The second part of the course focuses on the role of the stock market as a
primary market, that is, in raising capital: the listing decision, IPO pricing, the tradeoffs that
firms face in choosing a mix of publicly traded and closely held sources of financing.
Schedule In general, two lectures and one class hour a week. We will keep the division
between lectures and classes flexible:
The midterm test will be held on Tuesday Oct 24, at 1:30 p.m. (subject to change).
Requirements/grading
Class exercises and paper/presentation: 30 %
Midterm test: 30 %
Final examination: 40 %
READING LIST
There is no specific textbook for the course. Readings will be made available.
Harris, Larry, Trading and Exchanges (incomplete draft), Oxford University Press
(forthcoming)
Teweles, Richard J., Edward S. Bradley, and Ted M. Teweles, The Stock Market, John
Wiley & Sons., 1998, 7th edition
Daly, Robert and Harry Newton, What Should It Really Cost to Trade? Technology
Investor, September 2000, pp. 52-56. (http://www.technologyinvestor.com)
Fabozzi, Frank J., Franco Modigliani and Michael G. Ferri, 1998. Chapters 15, 18 and 19
(Secondary Markets, Common Stock Markets and Stock Markets around the
World), pp. 288-299 and 338-384 of: Foundations of Financial Markets and
Institutions, Prentice-Hall International, Englewood Cliffs, second edition.
Gitman, Lawrence J. and Joehnk Michael D., Fundamentals of Investing (7th edition),
Chapter 2 only
Bray, Margaret, 1985, Rational expectations, information and asset markets: an introduction,
Oxford Economic Papers 37, 161-195. Simplified model of lectures.
"Walter Bagehot" (Jack L. Treynor), 1971. The only game in town, Financial Analysts
Journal 27, 12-14, 22.
Kyle, Albert S., 1985. Continuous auctions and insider trading, Econometrica 53, sections 1
and 2 only, pp. 1315-1320. [JSTOR]
Grossman, Sanford J. and Merton H. Miller, 1988, Liquidity and Market Structure, Journal
of Finance, Vol. XLIII, No. 3, [JSTOR]
Miller, Merton H. and Charles W. Upton, 1991, Strategies for capital market structure and
regulation, Chapter 8 (pp. 127-167) of: Merton H. Miller, Financial Innovations and
Market Volatility, Blackwell, Cambridge MA & Oxford UK.
Pagano, Marco and Ailsa A. Rell, 1992. Auction and dealership markets: What is the
difference? European Economic Review 36.
Hendershott, Terrence, and Haim Mendelson, Crossing Networks and Dealer Markets:
Competition and Performance, Journal of Finance. (forthcoming) [only main idea]
Overview article
Madhavan, Ananth, Market Microstructure: A Survey, Journal of Financial Markets
(forthcoming), [on the web: http://www.marshall.usc.edu/FBE/index.html ]
Background reading:
The Brady and Miller Reports, 1988. Reproduced in Part II of: Barro, Robert J., Eugene F.
Fama, Daniel R. Fischel, Allan H. Meltzer, Richard Roll and Lester G. Telser, Black
Monday and the Future of Financial Markets, Dow-Jones-Irwin, 1989.
Greenwald, Bruce and Jeremy Stein, 1988. The Task Force Report: The Reasoning Behind
the Recommendations, Journal of Economic Perspectives 2(3), 3-23. [JSTOR]
Kyle, Albert S., 1988. Improving the performance of the stock market, California
Management Review 30, 90-114.
Wigmore, Barrie A., 1998. Revisiting the October 1987 Crash, Financial Analysts Journal
54(1), 36-48.
Jacobs, Bruce I., 1999, Capital Ideas and Market Realities, Blackwell Publishers, Oxford
Herding Models:
Bikhchandani, Sushil, David Hirshleifer, and Ivo Welch, 1992, A Theory of Fads,
Fashion, Custom, and Cultural Change as Informational Cascades, Journal of
Political Economy, 100, 992-1026.
Crash Models:
Avery, Christopher and Peter Zemsky, 1998, Multi-dimensional Uncertainty and Herd
Behavior in Financial Markets, American Economic Review, 88 (4), 724-748.
Lee, In-Ho, 1998, Market Crashes and Information Avalanches, Review of Economic
Studies, 65, 741-759.
Grossman, Sanford, An Analysis of the Implications for Stock and Futures Price
Volatility of Program Trading and Dynamic Trading Strategies, Journal of
Business, 1988, 61, 275-298.
Bubbles:
Allen, Franklin and Douglas Gale, 1999, Bubbles, Crises, and Policy Oxford Review of
Economic Policy, Vol. 15, No. 3.
Blanchard, Olivier and Mark Watson, 1982, Bubbles, Rational Expectations and Financial
Markets, in P. Wachtel (ed.) Crisis in the Economic and Financial Structure:
Bubbles, Bursts and Shocks, Lexington, Lexington, MA
8. Keynes Beauty Contest Investigative Herding
Keynes, John Maynard, 1936. The state of long-term expectation, Chapter 12 of The
General Theory of Employment Interest and Money.
Froot, Kenneth A., David S. Scharfstein and Jeremy C. Stein, 1992, Herd on the Street:
Informational Inefficiencies in a Market with Short-Term Speculation, Journal of
Finance, Vol. 47, pp. 1461-1484.
Dow, James and Gary Gorton, 1994, Arbitrage Chains, Journal of Finance, Vol. 49, No.
3, pp. 819-849.
Amihud, Yakov and Haim Mendelson, 1986. Liquidity and stock returns, Financial
Analysts Journal, May-June, 43-48.
Lecture notes.
Fabozzi, Frank J., Franco Modigliani and Michael G. Ferri, Chapter 14 (Primary Markets
and the Underwriting of Securities), pp. 271-287 of: Foundations of Financial
Markets and Institutions, Prentice-Hall International, Englewood Cliffs, second
edition, 1998.
IPO pricing
Ibbotson, Roger G. and Jay R. Ritter, 1996. Initial public offerings, in: R. Jarrow and V.
Maksimovic (eds.), Handbook of Finance, North-Holland Elsevier.
Rock, Kevin, 1986. Why new issues are underpriced, Journal of Financial Economics 15,
187-212. Lecture note.
Benveniste, Lawrence M. and Paul A. Spindt, 1989. How investment bankers determine the
offer price and allocation of new issues, Journal of Financial Economics 24, 343-
361.
Why go public?
Pagano, Marco, Fabio Panetta and Luigi Zingales, 1998. Why do companies go public? An
empirical analysis, Journal of Finance.
Rell, Ailsa A., 1996. The decision to go public: An overview. European Economic Review
40, 1071-1081.
Cost of an IPO
Chen, Hsuan-Chi and Jay R. Ritter, 2000. The Seven Percent Solution. Journal of Finance,
Vol. LV, No. 3
Holmstrom, Bengt and Jean Tirole, 1993, Market liquidity and performance monitoring,
Journal of Political Economy 101, 401-419. Introduction and conclusions;
handout.
Dow, James and Gary Gorton, 1997, Stock market efficiency and economic efficiency: is
there a connection? Journal of Finance 52, 1087-1129. Lecture note (simplified
model).
Levine, Ross and Sara Zervos, 1998. Stock markets, banks, and economic growth, American
Economic Review 88, 537-558.
Rajan, Raghuram G. and Luigi Zingales, 1998. Financial dependence and growth,
American Economic Review 88, 559-586.
Stiglitz, J. and Weiss A., 1981, Credit Rationing in Markets with Imperfect
Information, American Economic Review 71, 393-410.
Bester, Helmut and Hellwig, Martin, 1987, Moral Hazard and Equilibrium Credit
Rationing: An Overview of the Issues in Bamberg, Gunter, ed.; Spremann, K., ed.
Agency theory, information, and incentives. New York; Berlin; London and Tokyo:
Springer, 1987, pages 135-166.
IV. POSSIBLE STUDENT PRESENTATIONS
How does short-selling really work? What are the costs? Can one always short-sell?
Explaining the Palm Saga!
Discriminatory-price versus single-price auctions (-)
Continuous trading versus batch (call) auctions
Insider trading rules (legal versus economic view)
Margin requirements and the stock market crash in 1929
The burst of the Internet bubble in April 2000 What were the causes for the burst
according to the print media?
Competition between Exchanges/Trading Systems
Electronic Communication Networks (ECN)
Day trading and the Internet Do day traders provide liquidity or take liquidity away?
Indices and the impacts on stock prices
Investors Psychology Behavioral Finance
Emerging markets In what way are they different?
Tick size, preferencing and spreads (-)
The NASDAQ odd-eighths episode (-)
When does liquidity dry up? Why?
Transparency issues
David Skeie, our preceptor, has a lot of institutional background concerning financial
markets. He will be happy to answer specific questions in his office hour.
You are required to submit (e-mail) preliminary drafts of your presentation (slides) on
Friday prior to your presentation.
Be a market maker:
http://www.academic.nasdaq.com/HeadTrader/head_trader.htm
http://LHarris.USC.edu/trading/DealerGame/Default.htm