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Market Microstructure in Practice

by Charles-Albert Lehalle and Sophie Laruelle (2013)

Quick summary - an in-depth PhD-level extended summary (10-30 pages) for this book is coming soon.

Market Microstructure in Practice

By Charles-Albert Lehalle and Sophie Laruelle

Overview

Published in 2014 by World Scientific, "Market Microstructure in Practice" is an advanced text that examines the structure and functioning of modern financial markets in the era of electronic trading and regulatory fragmentation. Written by Charles-Albert Lehalle (Senior Research Manager at Capital Fund Management) and Sophie Laruelle (Assistant Professor at Universite Paris-Est Creteil), the book combines rigorous quantitative analysis with practical insights from the European equity market.

Key Themes and Arguments

Market Fragmentation

The book provides a comprehensive analysis of how the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) in Europe and Regulation NMS in the United States led to the fragmentation of equity trading across multiple venues. The authors document the evolution through three distinct phases: initial fragmentation attempts, convergence toward a European-wide offering, and the emergence of broker crossing networks and dark pools.

Smart Order Routing

A central topic is the design and functioning of Smart Order Routers (SORs) -- the technology that enables orders to be split across multiple trading venues to achieve best execution. The authors analyze how SOR algorithms must account for latency differences, fee structures, and the information leakage associated with displaying orders across multiple venues.

Tick Size and Market Quality

The book provides one of the most thorough analyses available of how tick size (the minimum price increment) affects market quality. The authors demonstrate that tick size influences the bid-ask spread, the profitability of market making, the incentives for high-frequency traders, and ultimately the cost of trading for institutional investors.

Dark Pools

The mechanism and impact of dark liquidity pools are analyzed in depth, including how dark pools interact with lit markets, the optimal allocation of orders between dark and lit venues, and the regulatory concerns surrounding lack of pre-trade transparency.

High-Frequency Trading

The book examines the role of high-frequency traders in modern markets, including their impact on liquidity provision, price discovery, and systemic risk. The analysis of the May 6, 2010 Flash Crash provides a case study in the vulnerabilities of fragmented, electronically-traded markets.

Optimal Execution

The final section addresses the design of optimal trading algorithms, including market impact models, the trade-off between information leakage and execution speed, and the measurement of execution quality through transaction cost analysis (TCA).

Significance

This book is an essential reference for anyone involved in algorithmic trading, market design, or financial regulation. Its combination of theoretical rigor and empirical evidence from actual market data makes it one of the most authoritative treatments of post-MiFID market structure available.

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