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Mixture of Distribution Hypothesis: Analyzing daily liquidity frictions and information flows

Darolles, Serge; Le Fol, Gaëlle; Mero, Gulten (2017), Mixture of Distribution Hypothesis: Analyzing daily liquidity frictions and information flows, Journal of Econometrics. 10.1016/j.jeconom.2017.08.014

Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publié
Date
2017
Journal name
Journal of Econometrics
Publisher
Elsevier
Publication identifier
10.1016/j.jeconom.2017.08.014
Metadata
Show full item record
Author(s)
Darolles, Serge
Dauphine Recherches en Management [DRM]
Le Fol, Gaëlle
Dauphine Recherches en Management [DRM]
Mero, Gulten
Fondation MINES ParisTech [FI3M]
Abstract (EN)
The mixture of distribution hypothesis (MDH) model offers an appealing explanation for the positive relation between trading volume and volatility of returns. In this specification, the information flows constitute the only mixing variable responsible for all changes. However, this single static latent mixing variable cannot account for the observed short-run dynamics of volume and volatility. In this paper, we propose a dynamic extension of the MDH that specifies the impact of information arrival on market characteristics in the context of liquidity frictions. We distinguish between short-term and long-term liquidity frictions. Our results highlight the economic value and statistical accuracy of our specification. First, based on some goodness of fit tests, we show that our dynamic two-latent factor model outperforms all competing specifications. Second, the information flows latent variable can be used to propose a new momentum strategy. We show that this signal improves once we allow for a second signal – the liquidity frictions latent variable – as the momentum strategies based on our model present better performance than the strategies based on competing models
Subjects / Keywords
C52; C51; Strategic liquidity trading; market efficiency; mixture of distributionhypothesis; information-based trading; extended Kalman Filter; G12; G14
JEL
C51 - Model Construction and Estimation
C52 - Model Evaluation, Validation, and Selection
G14 - Information and Market Efficiency; Event Studies; Insider Trading
G12 - Asset Pricing; Trading Volume; Bond Interest Rates

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