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Did decimalization hurt institutional investors?
Authors:Sugato Chakravarty   Venkatesh Panchapagesan  Robert A. Wood  
Affiliation:aPurdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906-1262, USA;bWashington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA;cUniversity of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA
Abstract:We examine institutional trading costs around the move to penny size ticks in 2001 (i.e., decimalization). We find that overall trading costs declined, with improvements in most partitions across order size, firm size, and manager style. Improvements were most pronounced for orders that were executed over multiple days and for stocks where the minimum tick sizes were likely to have been binding. However, costs did increase for orders executed within a single day. The improvements we document contrast with changes accompanying the reduction of minimum ticks to sixteenths in 1997 though, in both cases, results suggest that more patient traders fare relatively better than those that demand immediacy.
Keywords:Decimalization   Institutions   Trading costs   Adverse selection   Sixteenths
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