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Sources of liquidity for NYSE-listed non-US stocks
Authors:Jeffrey M Bacidore  Robert Battalio  Neal Galpin  Robert Jennings  
Institution:aGoldman Sachs & Co., One New York Plaza, New York, NY 10004, USA;bDepartment of Finance, Mendoza College of Business Administration, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA;cDepartment of Finance, Kelley School of Business, Indiana University, 1309 E. Tenth Street, Bloomington, IN 47401, USA
Abstract:We examine the components of displayed (quoted) liquidity and the amount of non-displayed liquidity on the NYSE for a sample of non-US stocks. Consistently with prior work, non-US stocks have less displayed liquidity than similar US stocks. Extending prior research, we find that this is true both in the limit order book and on the floor. As Domowitz et al. Domowitz, I., Glen, J., Madhavan, A., 1998. International cross-listing and order flow migration: Evidence from and emerging market. Journal of Finance 53, 2001–2027] posit, non-US stocks from transparent/linked home markets have more displayed NYSE liquidity when the home market is open but non-US stocks from opaque/non-linked home markets have more NYSE displayed liquidity when the home market is closed. Non-US and US stocks have similar supplies of non-displayed liquidity, consistent with the idea that the conditional nature of non-displayed liquidity allows NYSE traders to mitigate adverse selection problems inherent in trading non-US stocks. Our results imply that non-US stocks have less total (displayed plus non-displayed) liquidity than US stocks.
Keywords:Liquidity  Inter-market linkage  Limit order book  Bid–  ask spreads
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