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Price impact of block trades: the curious case of downstairs trading in the EU emissions futures market
Authors:Gbenga Ibikunle  Andros Gregoriou  Naresh R. Pandit
Affiliation:1. University of Edinburgh Business School, University of Edinburgh, 29 Buccleuch Place, Edinburgh EH8 9JS, UKEmail: gbenga.ibikunle@ed.ac.uk;2. Centre for Empirical Finance and Banking, Hull University Business School, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, UK;3. Norwich Business School, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, Norfolk NR4 7TJ, UK
Abstract:Using high-frequency data from the European Climate Exchange (ECX), we examine the determinants of price impact of €21 billion worth of block trades during 2008–2011 in the European carbon market. We find that wider bid-ask spreads and volatility are characterised by a smaller price impact. Larger levels of price impact are more likely to occur during the middle of the trading day, specifically the four-hour period between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., than during the first or final hours. Purchase block trades induce a relatively smaller price impact on price run-up, while sell block trades exhibit a larger price impact on price run-up. We conclude that block trades on the ECX induce less price impact than in equity or conventional futures markets, and that a significant proportion of the effects contradict findings on block trades in those markets; thus, we provide the first evidence of the curious bent to block trading in the European Union emissions trading scheme.
Keywords:carbon futures  block trades  price impact  high-frequency trades  European Union emissions trading scheme (EU-ETS)  determinants  liquidity
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