Dealer Markets Under Stress: The Performance of NASDAQ Market Makers During the November 15, 1991, Market Break |
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Authors: | William Gary Christie Paul Harvey Schultz |
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Affiliation: | (1) Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN;(2) College of Business Administration, University of Notre Dame, IN |
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Abstract: | The liquidity of the NASDAQ market was seriously undermined during the crash on October 19, 1987, when bid-ask spreads widened dramatically and dealers reputedly withdrew from market making. This paper studies the liquidity of 36 NASDAQ issues on November 15, 1991, when average prices fell over 4%, representing the first major correction in the post-crash era. We find that bid-ask spreads, the percentage of dealers posting inside quotes, and trading volume remained virtually unaffected. Effective spreads were also largely unaffected, except for trades in excess of 1,000 shares among issues whose market makers avoided odd-eighth quotes. Our evidence implies that, unlike October 1987, the liquidity of the NASDAQ market did not deteriorate appreciably during this episode of unusual market stress. |
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