Search results for " Trading"

showing 10 items of 83 documents

Profili penali dell'Insider Trading

2012

Mercati FinanziariInsider TradingDiritto PenaleSettore IUS/17 - Diritto Penale
researchProduct

An ACE Wholesale Electricity Market Framework with Bilateral Trading

2011

In this paper, an agent-based simulation model for a hybrid power market structure is presented. A bilateral transaction mechanism is combined with a uniform-pricing auction settlement in order to isolate the impact of medium-term bilateral contracts on market power and spot prices in a competitive wholesale market setting. First we describe the negotiation method for bilateral trading of energy and then introduce a new approach for bidding in the DA market based on the load duration curve. We find that, despite the conventional concerns, the foreclosure effect produced by the bilateral agreement between a generation and a retail business will not necessarily lead to higher prices, and will…

MicroeconomicsMarket structureSpot contractSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Order (exchange)Electricity marketLoad duration curveBusinessMarket powerBiddingWholesale electricity market Bilateral trading Day-ahead market Agent-based simulation modelDatabase transaction
researchProduct

El componente de selección adversa de la horquilla de precios cotizada: una revisión de los modelos de estimación

2005

-Jose.E.Farinos@uv.es -Ana.M.Ibanez@uv.es Una de las principales preocupaciones en el área de la microestructura del mercado ha sido la estimación de los componentes no observables de la horquilla de precios a partir de las series de datos que proporcionan los mercados financieros, despertando quizá un mayor interés el de selección adversa por la implicaciones que supone la existencia del mismo. Esto ha provocado el desarrollo de numerosos modelos empíricos que, basándose en las propiedades estadísticas de las series de precios, proporcionan dichas estimaciones. La mayor disponibilidad de datos existentes en los mercados ha permitido el desarrollo en los últimos años de modelos basados en t…

Microestructura de los mercados financieros; Negociación informada; Horquilla de precios; Selección adversa; Costes de transacciónmarket microstructureselección adversajel:D82spreadinsider tradingFINANCIAL ECONOMICSadverse selection componentG12G34microestructura de los mercados financieros:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Economía sectorial::Finanzas y seguros [UNESCO]ECONOMICSORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENTBUSINESS AND INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENTUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS::Economía sectorial::Finanzas y segurosjel:G12jel:G34Costes de transacciónD82MICROECONOMICSmicroestructura de los mercados financieros negociación informada horquilla de precios selección adversa market microstructure insider trading spread adverse selection component transaction costtransaction costhorquilla de preciosINDUSTRIAL RELATIONS AND LABORSTRATEGY AND MANAGEMENTnegociación informada
researchProduct

CO<SUB align="right">2 prices and portfolio management

2011

Since the launch of the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS), the interest in the trade of EUAs is constantly increasing among academics and market participants. The objective of this paper is twofold: (a) a detailed description of this new market is provided for portfolio managers and (b) a comprehensive study of the implications of including Phase II EUAs in diversified portfolios is undertaken using as expected returns both historical and risk-adjusted returns. The results show that the opportunity set for investors increases when short positions in Phase II EUAs are taken.

Nuclear Energy and EngineeringRenewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentFinancial economicsGreenhouse gasCarbon marketEnergy Engineering and Power TechnologyPortfolioEuropean Union Emission Trading SchemeEmissions tradingBusinessProject portfolio managementInternational Journal of Global Energy Issues
researchProduct

Comparison of E-Trust and Trust Concepts in Online and Offline Dimensions

2017

Abstract In everyday lives, we more and more use different technology products to make our lives easier and faster. We often do not realise that we are switching our lifestyles to the online platform - we do everything mostly online - meet and communicate with others, watch videos and listen to favourite songs, choose and buy different things. The main question is - can we trust everything that we see on the screen? Is the explanation of “trust” the same in real life and in online sphere? Authors of the paper compare the concept of “trust” in offline trade market with that in online trading. The following methods were used - literature study and analysis, consumer survey and statistical ana…

Online and offlineonline tradingEngineeringHF5001-6182Process (engineering)media_common.quotation_subjecte-trustLoyalty business modelAge groups0502 economics and businessLoyaltycustomer behaviourIn real lifeStatistical analysisBusinessHB71-74media_commonbusiness.industry05 social sciencessatisfactionAdvertisingOnline tradingloyaltyCustomer behaviourEconomics as a science050211 marketingbusiness050203 business & managementEconomics and Business
researchProduct

Spanish Stock Returns: Rational or Weather-Influenced?

2002

Psychological studies support the existence of an influence of weather on mood. It could affect the behaviour of market traders, as suggested by some authors, and this should be reflected by the stock returns. This paper investigates the possible relation between weather and market index returns in the context of the Spanish market, in order to test the above hypothesis. In 1989, this market changed its open outcry trading system into a computerised and decentralised trading system. Therefore, it is possible to check the influence of weather variables (sunshine hours and humidity levels) on index returns in an open outcry trading system, and to compare it with a screen traded environment. T…

Open outcryFinancial economicsSunshine durationEconomicsAlgorithmic tradingcomputer.software_genreCONTESTEmpirical evidencecomputerStock market indexStock (geology)SSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct

Resource or waste? A perspective of plastics degradation in soil with a focus on end-of-life options.

2018

‘Capable-of-being-shaped’ synthetic compounds are prevailing today over horn, bone, leather, wood, stone, metal, glass, or ceramic in products that were previously left to natural materials. Plastic is, in fact, economical, simple, adaptable, and waterproof. Also, it is durable and resilient to natural degradation (although microbial species capable of degrading plastics do exist). In becoming a waste, plastic accumulation adversely affects ecosystems. The majority of plastic debris pollutes waters, accumulating in oceans. And, the behaviour and the quantity of plastic, which has become waste, are rather well documented in the water, in fact. This review collects existing information on pla…

PLA polylactic acidPS polystyreneETS European Emissions Trading schemePOM polyoxymethyleneHMC heat melt compactor technology02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesNHV net habitable volumeLDPE low-density polyethylene01 natural sciencesPC polycarbonateResin identification codeLCP liquid crystal polymerslcsh:Social sciences (General)PAC pro-oxidant additive containingPET polyethylene terephthalateEPR Extended Producers ResponsibilityMultidisciplinaryWaste managementNatural materials021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPU or PUR polyurethaneSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeEPS expandable polystyreneRIC resin identification codeSettore AGR/14 - PedologiaPVDF polydifluoroethylenelcsh:H1-990210 nano-technologyBiogeoscienceGPPS Polystyrene (General Purpose)PVC polyvinyl chlorideResource (biology)Polymethyl methacrylatePA polyamidePBT polybutylene terephthalatePSU polyarylsulfonePTFE polytetrafluoroethylenePMMA polymethyl methacrylatePHA polyhydroxyalkanoateMicrobiologyPEEK polyaryletheretherketoneArticleEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental science Biogeoscience Industry MicrobiologyPPA polyphthalamideTPE thermoplastic polyester elastomerNatural degradationIndustryPPS polyphenylene sulphidelcsh:Science (General)ABS acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesbusiness.industryPP polypropyleneHDPE high-density polyethyleneBPA bisphenol AHBCD hexabromocyclododecaneFuture studyAgricultureDOM dissolved organic matterDegradation (geology)Environmental sciencebusinesslcsh:Q1-390Heliyon
researchProduct

There's more to volatility than volume

2006

It is widely believed that fluctuations in transaction volume, as reflected in the number of transactions and to a lesser extent their size, are the main cause of clustered volatility. Under this view bursts of rapid or slow price diffusion reflect bursts of frequent or less frequent trading, which cause both clustered volatility and heavy tails in price returns. We investigate this hypothesis using tick by tick data from the New York and London Stock Exchanges and show that only a small fraction of volatility fluctuations are explained in this manner. Clustered volatility is still very strong even if price changes are recorded on intervals in which the total transaction volume or number of…

Physics - Physics and SocietyEconomicsvolatilityFOS: Physical sciencessubordinated processesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)FOS: Economics and businessStock exchangeddc:330EconometricsEconomicsVolatility Modelling; Transaction Frequency; Trading Volume; Market StructurevolumeStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Financial marketVolume (computing)WirtschaftQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinancePolitical EconomyVolkswirtschaftslehrefinancial marketVolatility (finance)Constant (mathematics)General Economics Econometrics and FinanceDatabase transactionFinance
researchProduct

Diffusive behavior and the modeling of characteristic times in limit order executions

2007

We present an empirical study of the first passage time (FPT) of order book prices needed to observe a prescribed price change Delta, the time to fill (TTF) for executed limit orders and the time to cancel (TTC) for canceled ones in a double auction market. We find that the distribution of all three quantities decays asymptotically as a power law, but that of FPT has significantly fatter tails than that of TTF. Thus a simple first passage time model cannot account for the observed TTF of limit orders. We propose that the origin of this difference is the presence of cancellations. We outline a simple model, which assumes that prices are characterized by the empirically observed distribution …

Physics - Physics and SocietyFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Power lawFOS: Economics and businessOrder bookTime to fillLimit (mathematics)Statistical physicsMicrostructureMathematicsQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureEconophysicsLimit order marketEconophysicProbability and statisticsFirst passage timeTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Distribution (mathematics)Physics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityExponentCensored dataFirst-hitting-time modelGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)
researchProduct

Limit order placement as an utility maximization problem and the origin of power law distribution of limit order prices

2006

I consider the problem of the optimal limit order price of a financial asset in the framework of the maximization of the utility function of the investor. The analytical solution of the problem gives insight on the origin of the recently empirically observed power law distribution of limit order prices. In the framework of the model, the most likely proximate cause of this power law is a power law heterogeneity of traders' investment time horizons .

Physics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureFinancial assetFOS: Physical sciencesFunction (mathematics)MaximizationPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Condensed Matter PhysicsInvestment (macroeconomics)Power lawElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businesssymbols.namesakeProximate and ultimate causationUtility maximization problemsymbolsEconometricsEconomicsPareto distributioneconophysics financial markets business and management
researchProduct