Closing the Floor: Evidence of Price Discovery on the Sydney Futures Exchange
Babcock School Working Paper 98-022
Posted: 8 Nov 1998
Date Written: November 1998
Abstract
This paper examines the contribution of local floor traders to price discovery on the Sydney Futures Exchange using the methods of error-correction and common-long-memory components. Four financial instruments (i.e., three-year bonds, ten-year bonds, ninety-day bankers accepted bills, and the stock index) are examined. For each of the futures contracts, the price series of locals' and other brokers' trades are cointegrated. The locals contribute about 40% of the order flow but account for as much as 73% of the price discovery. Error-correction analysis reveals exceptionally long lag structures in the dynamic adjustment of equilibrium prices in these markets. Both locals and other traders error-correct their prices to each other's trades. Locals acting as scalpers may fill a role similar to that of SOES bandits in equity markets. The research has policy implications for floor-closing initiatives and proposals on the London, Sydney, and Chicago futures exchanges and the Toronto Stock Exchange.
JEL Classification: G13, G14, G15
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation