The Dynamic Relationship Between Price Volatility, Trading Volume and Market Depth

The Dynamic Relationship Between Price Volatility, Trading Volume and Market Depth

Author: Wan Mansor Mahmood

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The study examines the relations between returns, trade volume and market depth for two futures contracts, namely, Stock Index (SI) futures and Crude Palm Oil (CPO) futures traded at the Kuala Lumpur Option and Financial Futures (KLOFFE), and Commodity and Monetary Exchange (COMMEX), respectively. The study looks on the effect of volume as well as open interest, proxy of market depth, on volatility and vice versa. Since both volume and open interest are highly serially correlated, the study partitioned these variables into expected and unexpected component. The results of this study show a positive expected and unexpected volume and market depth on volatility, similar with previous study on futures market.


An Analysis of Price Volatility, Trading Volume and Market Depth of Stock Futures Market in India

An Analysis of Price Volatility, Trading Volume and Market Depth of Stock Futures Market in India

Author: Srinivasan Kaliyaperumal

Publisher: GRIN Verlag

Published: 2018-03-13

Total Pages: 144

ISBN-13: 3668659958

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Project Report from the year 2010 in the subject Business economics - Investment and Finance, , course: Ph. D, language: English, abstract: Every modern economy is based on a sound financial system and acts as a monetary channel for productive purpose with effecting economic growth. It encourages saving habit by throwing open and plethora of instrument avenues suiting to the individuals requirements, mobilizing savings from households and other segments and allocating savings into productive usage such as trade, commerce, manufacture etc. Thus a financial system can also be understood as institutional arrangements, through which financial surpluses are mobilized from the units generating surplus income and transferring them to the others in need of them. In nutshell, financial market, financial assets, financial services and financial institutions constitute the financial system. The activities include exchange and holding of financial assets or instruments of different kinds of financial institutions, banks and other intermediaries of the market. Financial markets provide channels for allocation of savings to investment and provide variety of assets to savers in various forms in which the investors can park their funds. At the same time, financial market is one that integral part of the financial system which makes significant contribution to the countries’ economic development. It establishes a link between the demand and supply of long-term capital funds. The economic strength of a country depends squarely on the state of financial market, apart from the productive potential of the country. The efficient allocation of fund by the capital market depends on the state of capital market. All the countries therefore focus more on the functioning of the capital market. Indian financial market has faced many challenges in the process of effecting more efficient allocation and mobilization of capital. It has attained a remarkable degree of growth in the last decade and in continuing to achieve the same in current decade also. Opening up of the economy and adoption of the liberalized economic policies have driven our economy more towards the free market. Over the last few years, financial markets, more specifically the security market were experiencing a lot of structural and regulatory changes. The major constituents of financial market are money market and the capital market catering to the type of capital requirements.


Volume, Volatility, Price, and Profit When All Traders are Above Average

Volume, Volatility, Price, and Profit When All Traders are Above Average

Author: Terrance Odean

Publisher:

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 52

ISBN-13:

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People are overconfident. Overconfidence affects financial markets. How depends on who in the market is overconfident and on how information is distributed. This paper examines markets in which price-taking traders, a strategic-trading insider, and risk-averse market-makers are overconfident. Overconfidence increases expected trading volume, increases market depth, and decreases the expected utility of overconfident traders. Its effect on volatility and price quality depend on who is overconfident. Overconfident traders can cause markets to underreact to the information of rational traders. Markets also underreact to abstract, statistical, and highly relevant information, while they overreact to salient, anecdotal, and less relevant information.


The Volatility Course

The Volatility Course

Author: George A. Fontanills

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2002-10-11

Total Pages: 360

ISBN-13: 9780471398165

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It takes a special set of trading skills to thrive in today's intensely volatile markets, where point swings of plus or minus 200 points can occur on a weekly, sometimes daily, basis. The Volatility Course arms stock and options traders with those skills. George Fontanills and Tom Gentile provide readers with a deeper understanding of market volatility and the forces that drive it. They develop a comprehensive road map detailing how to identify its ups and downs. And they describe proven strategies and tools for quantifying volatility and confidently developing plans tailored to virtually any given market condition. The companion workbook provides step-by-step exercises to help you master the strategies outlined in The Volatility Course before putting them into action in the markets.


The Trader's Book of Volume: The Definitive Guide to Volume Trading

The Trader's Book of Volume: The Definitive Guide to Volume Trading

Author: Mark Leibovit

Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional

Published: 2011-01-07

Total Pages: 464

ISBN-13: 0071753761

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Learn how to translate the "language" of volume! Mark Leibovit, a leading market strategist and technical analyst with more than 35 years of trading experience, possesses a solid track record of predicting important movements in the financial market—including Black Monday of 1987, the bear markets of 2000 and 2008, and the “flash crash” of May 2010. Now, with The Trader’s Book of Volume, his secrets are yours! Focusing exclusively on volume technical analysis, The Trader’s Book of Volume describes the basics of volume, explains how to use it to identify and assess the strength of trade-worthy trends, and provides in-depth techniques and strategies for trading volume indicators for profit. With more than 400 charts and graphs, The Trader’s Book of Volume also exhaustively illustrates how readers can profit from a wide array of volume indicators, including: Broad Market Volume Indicators—Cumulative Volume Index, ARMS Index, Upside-Downside Volume, Nasdaq/ NYSE Volume Ratio, Yo-Yo Indicator Volume Indicators—Accumulation/ Distribution, Intraday Intensity, Negative Volume Index, On-Balance Volume, Open Interest Volume Oscillators—Klinger Oscillator, Chaikin Money Flow, Ease of Movement, Volume Oscillator Leibovit Volume Reversal IndicatorTM, the author’s proprietary methodology Under the author’s expert guidance, you can seamlessly incorporate Volume Analysis into your day-to-day trading program. Without a proper approach to Volume Analysis, Leibovit asserts, you’re essentially trading in the “land of the blind.” Use The Trader’s Book of Volume to gain the clearest view possible of market trends and react to them with the confidence and smarts for consistent trading success—and avoid every market crash the future holds.