Authors
Thierry Foucault, Roman Kozhan, Wing Wah Tham
Publication date
2017
Journal
Review of Financial Studies
Volume
30
Issue
4
Pages
1053–1094
Description
Short-lived arbitrage opportunities arise when prices adjust with a lag to new information. They are toxic because they expose dealers to the risk of trading at stale quotes. Hence, theory implies that more frequent toxic arbitrage opportunities and faster responses to these opportunities should impair liquidity. We provide supporting evidence using data on triangular arbitrage. As predicted, illiquidity is higher on days when the fraction of toxic arbitrage opportunities and arbitrageurs’ relative speed are higher. Overall, our findings suggest that the price efficiency gain of high-frequency arbitrage comes at the cost of increased adverse selection risk.
Received March 25, 2015; editorial decision September 21, 2016 by Editor Andrew Karolyi.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T Foucault, R Kozhan, WW Tham - The Review of Financial Studies, 2017
R Kozhan, WW Tham - The Review of Financial Studies, 2016