Description
Book SynopsisThe New Stock Market covers a wide range of issues including the practices of high-frequency traders, insider trading, manipulation, short selling, broker-dealer practices, and trading venue fees and rebates. The book illuminates both the existing regulatory structure of our equity trading markets and how we can improve it.
Trade ReviewIn immensely readable fashion,
The New Stock Market connects the fundamentals of market structure to new (and old) challenges: insider trading, market manipulation, high-frequency trading. A profoundly important look at how our stock markets have changed and the regulatory first principles necessary to keep them orderly and equitable as these changes continue. -- Donald Langevoort, Georgetown University
The New Stock Market is a truly impressive achievement. It deserves an audience not only among scholars to whom its intellectual framework is already familiar but also among practitioners. Analysts, portfolio managers, risk managers, and C-suite executives who read this book will afterward stand on much firmer ground when opining on prospective securities legislation and regulation. -- Martin Fridson * Enterprising Investor *
Integrating the perspectives of information economics and the law for understanding markets for trading equity, this book will be of considerable interest to students of markets and the law, as well as securities lawyers, investment bankers, analysts, economists, and regulators. -- Chester Spatt, Carnegie Mellon Tepper School of Business and MIT Golub Center for Finance and Policy
The New Stock Market achieves a difficult balance: it is accessible yet sophisticated. The mysterious new terms of market microstructure—"high-frequency trader," "dark pool," "maker-taker" rebates, and "internalization"—are all fluently explained, and this serves as a prelude to the authors' careful weighing of the policy choices. Few books in this area have been this lucid and this rigorous at the same time. -- John C. Coffee, Columbia University
Equity capital markets are going through unprecedented change: new technology, new players, new venues, and new trading strategies. How can regulators respond to these developments without impeding market efficiency? These are the issues that Fox, Glosten, and Rauterberg analyze in their outstanding book, providing vital—and novel—insights and recommendations that should be welcomed by both regulators and investors. Highly recommended. -- Edward F. Greene, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1: Foundations1. The Institutions and Regulation of Trading Markets
2. The Social Function of Stock Markets
3. The Economics of Trading Markets
Part 2: Trading Market Practices4. High Frequency Trading
Part 3: Regulation of Traders5. The Economics of Informed Trading
6. The Regulation of Informed Trading
7. Manipulation
8. Short Selling
Part 4: Regulation of Broker-Dealers9. Broker-Dealers
10. Dark Pools
11. Maker-Taker Fees
12. Payment for Order Flow
Conclusion
Notes
Name Index
Subject Index