Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5086400 Japan and the World Economy 2008 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

Bessembinder [Bessembinder, H., 2000. Tick size, spreads, and liquidity: an analysis of NASDAQ securities trading near ten dollars, Journal of Financial Intermediation 9, 213-239] examines the effect of tick size changes from US$ 1/32 to US$ 1/8 on NASDAQ stocks when the stock prices pass US$ 10. In contrast with NASDAQ, the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) strictly enforces the price and time precedence rule. The TSE is also one of the largest limit-order markets using a tick size that is a step function of share price. The threshold, at ¥1000, is the most important among several other price levels. The minimum tick size increases from ¥1 to ¥10 when stock prices rise from below ¥1000 to above ¥1000. This large change in tick size and its effects on market quality have interested researchers for a long time [Amihud, Y., Mendelson, H. 1991. Volatility, efficiency and trading: evidence from the Japanese stock market, Journal of Finance 46, 1765-1789; Harris, L., 1994. Minimum price variations, discrete bid-ask spreads, and quotation sizes, Review of Financial Studies 7, 149-178], but they have never been examined. This study considers the impact of the change in minimum tick size on liquidity provisions as TSE stock prices cross the ¥1000 threshold. The empirical results provide some new insights regarding the effects of endogenous tick size changes.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
, , ,