Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.

The results from 17 new experiments and 19 previously reported experiments are compared in an investigation of call and continuous auctions. The call auction used is the computerized PLATO sealed bid/offer (SBO), uniform price auction. The continuous auction used is the PLATO double auction (DA), a...

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Main Author: Van Boening, Mark Virgil.
Other Authors: Smith, Vernon L.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185542
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1855422015-10-23T04:31:27Z Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization. Van Boening, Mark Virgil. Smith, Vernon L. Cox, James C. Oaxaca, Ronald L. Program trading (Securities) -- Congresses Securities industry -- Data processing -- Congresses Stock exchanges -- Data processing -- Congresses Commodity exchanges -- Data processing -- Congresses. The results from 17 new experiments and 19 previously reported experiments are compared in an investigation of call and continuous auctions. The call auction used is the computerized PLATO sealed bid/offer (SBO), uniform price auction. The continuous auction used is the PLATO double auction (DA), a computerized version of the "open outcry" double auction. The SBO call auction has temporal consolidation of market orders and has limited information about trading activity. The continuous DA auction is characterized by sequential bilateral trades, and trading information (bids, offers, and prices) is publicly displayed. The paper first explores the effect of multiple crossings per trading period in the SBO call auction. Next, a comparison of SBO and DA is made, based on market experiments using flow supply and demand schedules. The institutional comparison is then extended to experimental asset markets. The results imply the following. First, multiple calls per period increase the efficiency of the SBO call auction, relative to one call per period, but they also induce greater misrepresentation of costs and values in the first crossing each period. Buyers and sellers also withhold units from the first crossing in a further attempt to gain strategic advantage. However, neither the withholding nor the misrepresentation appears to have any substantial influence on price. Second, the SBO auction with two calls per period is as efficient as the DA auction. In markets with a random competitive equilibrium (CE) each period, the SBO auction does a better job than DA at tracking the random CE price. Thus the SBO auction is equally as efficient as the DA, and has the further attributes of lower price volatility and greater privacy. Third, in laboratory asset markets, the SBO auction exhibits price bubbles similar to those observed in DA markets. Price dynamics in the two institutions are comparable, despite the stark differences in order flow and information dissemination. 1991 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185542 702669840 9136871 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Program trading (Securities) -- Congresses
Securities industry -- Data processing -- Congresses
Stock exchanges -- Data processing -- Congresses
Commodity exchanges -- Data processing -- Congresses.
spellingShingle Program trading (Securities) -- Congresses
Securities industry -- Data processing -- Congresses
Stock exchanges -- Data processing -- Congresses
Commodity exchanges -- Data processing -- Congresses.
Van Boening, Mark Virgil.
Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.
description The results from 17 new experiments and 19 previously reported experiments are compared in an investigation of call and continuous auctions. The call auction used is the computerized PLATO sealed bid/offer (SBO), uniform price auction. The continuous auction used is the PLATO double auction (DA), a computerized version of the "open outcry" double auction. The SBO call auction has temporal consolidation of market orders and has limited information about trading activity. The continuous DA auction is characterized by sequential bilateral trades, and trading information (bids, offers, and prices) is publicly displayed. The paper first explores the effect of multiple crossings per trading period in the SBO call auction. Next, a comparison of SBO and DA is made, based on market experiments using flow supply and demand schedules. The institutional comparison is then extended to experimental asset markets. The results imply the following. First, multiple calls per period increase the efficiency of the SBO call auction, relative to one call per period, but they also induce greater misrepresentation of costs and values in the first crossing each period. Buyers and sellers also withhold units from the first crossing in a further attempt to gain strategic advantage. However, neither the withholding nor the misrepresentation appears to have any substantial influence on price. Second, the SBO auction with two calls per period is as efficient as the DA auction. In markets with a random competitive equilibrium (CE) each period, the SBO auction does a better job than DA at tracking the random CE price. Thus the SBO auction is equally as efficient as the DA, and has the further attributes of lower price volatility and greater privacy. Third, in laboratory asset markets, the SBO auction exhibits price bubbles similar to those observed in DA markets. Price dynamics in the two institutions are comparable, despite the stark differences in order flow and information dissemination.
author2 Smith, Vernon L.
author_facet Smith, Vernon L.
Van Boening, Mark Virgil.
author Van Boening, Mark Virgil.
author_sort Van Boening, Mark Virgil.
title Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.
title_short Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.
title_full Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.
title_fullStr Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.
title_full_unstemmed Call versus continuous auctions: An experimental study of market organization.
title_sort call versus continuous auctions: an experimental study of market organization.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1991
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185542
work_keys_str_mv AT vanboeningmarkvirgil callversuscontinuousauctionsanexperimentalstudyofmarketorganization
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