Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
958473 Journal of Empirical Finance 2012 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

Chordia, Roll and Subrahmanyam (2005, CRS) estimate the speed of convergence to market efficiency based on short-horizon return predictability of the 150 largest NYSE firms. We extend CRS to a broad panel of NYSE stocks and are the first to examine the relation between electronic communication networks (ECNs) and the corresponding informational efficiency of prices. Overall, we confirm CRS's result that price adjustments to new information occur on average within 5–15 min for large NYSE stocks. We further show that it takes about 20 min longer for smaller firms to incorporate information into prices. Most importantly, we demonstrate that the speed of convergence to market efficiency is significantly related to the type of trading platform where orders are executed, even after controlling for relative order flows, trading costs, volatility, informational effects, trading conditions, market quality, institutional trading activity, and other firm-specific characteristics. Our findings provide direct answers and insights to issues raised in a recent SEC concept release document.

► We examine the role of electronic communication networks in the price formation process. ► We evaluate a broad panel of NYSE and NYSE Arca stocks. ► Price adjustments to new information occur within 5–15 min for large NYSE stocks. ► It takes 25 min longer for smaller firms to incorporate information into prices. ► Speed of convergence to market efficiency is affected by the type of trading platform where orders are executed.

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