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Journal ArticleDOI

A New Estimate of Transaction Costs

TLDR
Lesmond et al. as discussed by the authors presented a model that requires only the time series of daily security returns to endogenously estimate the effective transaction costs for any firm, exchange, or time period.
Abstract
Transaction costs are important for a host of empirical analyses from market efficiency to international market research. But transaction costs estimates are not always available, or where available, are cumbersome to use and expensive to purchase. We present a model that requires only the time series of daily security returns to endogenously estimate the effective transaction costs for any firm, exchange, or time period. The feature of the data that allows for the estimation of transaction costs is the incidence of zero returns. Incorporating zero returns in the return-generating process, the model provides continuous estimates of average round-trip transaction costs from 1963 to 1990 that are 1.2% and 10.3% for large and small decile firms, respectively. These estimates are highly correlated (85%), with the most commonly used transaction cost estimators. How much does it cost to trade common stock? The Plexus Group (1996) estimated that trading costs are at least 1.0-2.0% of market value for institutions trading the largest NYSE/AMEX firms. Such trades account for more than 20% of reported trading volume. Stoll and Whaley (1983) reported quoted spread and commission costs of 2.0% for the largest NYSE size decile to 9.0% for the small decile. Bwardwaj and Brooks (1992) reported median quoted spread and commission costs between 2.0% for NYSE securities with prices greater than $20.00 and 12.5% for securities priced less than $5.00. These costs are important in determining investment performance and "can substantially reduce or possibly outweigh the expected value created by an investment strategy" [Keim and Madhavan (1995)]. This article is based on a portion of the first chapter of David A. Lesmond's dissertation entitled: "Trans

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Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal Versus Naive Diversification: How Inefficient is the 1/N Portfolio Strategy?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the out-of-sample performance of the sample-based mean-variance model, and its extensions designed to reduce estimation error, relative to the naive 1-N portfolio.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mandatory IFRS Reporting around the World: Early Evidence on the Economic Consequences

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the economic consequences of mandatory International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) reporting around the world and find that market liquidity increases around the time of the introduction of IFRS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do liquidity measures measure liquidity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared three measures, effective spread, realized spread, and price impact based on both Trade and Quote (TAQ) and Rule 605 data, and found that the new effective/realized spread measures win the majority of horseraces, while the Amihud [2002.5] measure does well measuring price impact.
Journal ArticleDOI

High idiosyncratic volatility and low returns: International and further U.S. evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that stocks with recent past high idiosyncratic volatility have low future average returns around the world, and that broad, not easily diversifiable factors lie behind this phenomenon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trading Costs and Returns for U.S. Equities: Estimating Effective Costs from Daily Data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new approach to estimate the effective cost of trading and the common variation in this cost, which is then used in conventional asset pricing specifications with a view to ascertaining the role of trading costs as a characteristic in explaining stock returns.
References
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Book

Limited-Dependent and Qualitative Variables in Econometrics

G. S. Maddala
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the use of truncated distributions in the context of unions and wages, and some results on truncated distribution Bibliography Index and references therein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous Auctions and Insider Trading

Albert S. Kyle
- 01 Nov 1985 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Bid, ask and transaction prices in a specialist market with heterogeneously informed traders

TL;DR: The presence of traders with superior information leads to a positive bid-ask spread even when the specialist is risk-neutral and makes zero expected profits as discussed by the authors, and the expectation of the average spread squared times volume is bounded by a number that is independent of insider activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Simple Model of Capital Market Equilibrium with Incomplete Information

TL;DR: The model financial economics encompasses finance, micro-investment theory and much of the economics of uncertainty as mentioned in this paper, and it has had a direct and significant influence on practice, as is evident from its influence on other branches of economics including public finance, industrial organization and monetary theory.