Our new approach to assessing market impact, and the results we have observed within Asia-Pacific’s cash equity markets.
By UBS APAC Quant Analytics and Distribution team
Planning is critical to traders’ workflow in translating a portfolio manager’s objective, news headlines, related flows and other information into execution intention and, in turn, algorithm selection. Understanding the cost of liquidity and impact cost across both individual and basket of orders is critical for strategy selection, calibration, post-trade transaction cost analysis (TCA) and performance reviews.
The hunt for liquidity entails constant optimization between impact and signaling in the market, while trying to minimize risk and execution cost. This is graphically represented in Figure 1.
Trader’s Dilemma plots execution risk versus impact cost trajectories. As your trading horizon increases, the risk of deviation from your desired execution price increases while the order’s impact on price decreases. Risk-adjusted cost consists of impact cost plus execution risk. Given that execution can express a variety of risk appetites (or urgencies) from the trader, the risk-adjusted cost converges to the impact cost as ‘Urgency’ to execute reduces.
Optimal frontier shows the expected impact cost for a standardized basket in different APAC markets, in this case USD10mn baskets, further highlighting the diversity across APAC markets. For a fixed notional basket, each market is faced with its own investor composition, regulatory, market structure and microstructure nuances. This explains the differing shapes of optimal cost/risk frontiers for each one.
UBS tackles the topic of market structure changes and regulatory updates and their impact on trading patterns through insights channels such as the UBS Microscope articles and Market Structure Spotlight seminars.
ASIA-PACIFIC: HETEROGENEITY, DIVERSITY, INCONGRUITY
Asian equity markets pose a trading challenge versus those in Europe or the US on account of variability of liquidity (largely concentrated on the primary venue), wider bid-ask spreads, and less active non-displayed venues. In addition, key market microstructure characteristics, driven by idiosyncratic market regulations, differ significantly among the prominent markets. This makes it a challenging task to estimate liquidity capture and market impact within a single model.
A NEW WAY TO CONSIDER ESTIMATED MARKET IMPACT
Traditional market impact models use order characteristics such as trading duration, participation rate and volatility to assess the impact of an order in the market. These traditional models typically assume mostly frictionless trading and uniform market microstructure characteristics amongst the stocks. In APAC, these assumptions do not hold true: ASEAN markets typically show wide bid-ask spreads and long queues at the touch, whereas markets like China and Hong Kong have a combination of wide spreads plus low volatility stocks mixed in with more liquid stocks. In addition, market factors like uptick rules on short sells have led to asymmetry, while the presence of hidden liquidity in markets like India and liquidity venues such as ASX Centrepoint have made traditional market impact models less effective.
EMBRACING DIVERSITY
The UBS approach embraces the diversity of APAC microstructures and incorporates them into our Market Impact model for Asia.
Assessing Liquidity Cost consists of two parts: order and market microstructure factors, which can differ substantially across APAC markets. It is a two-stage “mixed model” approach that breaks down the two components into individual factors that contributes to the overall Liquidity Cost.
Order factors such as the percentage of volume, duration (measured in volume time instead of actual time for normalization) and volatility are used to calculate cost of execution within the parametric model. This is a traditional estimation of market impact model with an intuitive linear relationship between order factors. For example, increasing percentage of volume while decreasing duration would correlate to increased impact.
Our updated Market Impact Model is formed by combining the results of the (order) parametric model as an input together with market microstructure factors. The advantage of this formulation is that while the assumptions of the parametric model broadly hold, the impact cost is less affected by market microstructure factors. Conversely, when the markets are harder to trade the microstructure factors have a heavier weight and can produce more accurate estimates.
The market microstructure factors chosen for the model combine traditional factors like bid-ask spread, average size of the top of the book and so forth, with non-traditional factors that are part of UBS Microstructure suite of analyses. The latter includes SpreadTau (a representation of stock volatility on the time domain) and bid-ask bounce (a normalization of quote stability of a stock).
The benefit of such an approach is also realized in a pragmatic manner. Moving away from assessing impact as a reference to one numeric value, we can provide the trader an understanding of the key contributing factors towards impact for a given market to help plan execution approach. Here the ‘importance feature’ methodology is used to represent the influence of parametric and non-parametric factors as observed in our base calibration. As reference, the example table below shows the results from an earlier point-in-time calibration.
The traditional parametric model is still relevant in markets like Japan and India, where the queue sizes are thin and the market moves quickly in small tick increments. Market factors are more significant in markets with wider bid-ask spread and thicker quote books such as the ASEAN markets. There, liquidity cost is best measured through factors such as the spread and size at the top of the book. Australia breaks this mold and favors a non-parametric model despite thin queue sizes and small spread, given the large amount of liquidity and price discovery that occurs through the auction periods and liquidity venues such as ASX Centrepoint.
UBS’s pre-trade analytic tool incorporates this mixed-model approach so we can provide our clients with the most accurate measurements in response to their needs for liquidity risk management. We are constantly calibrating and improving our models to help our clients make the most informed decisions around impact cost and duration risk when trading in today’s challenging markets. The pre-trade tool also allows clients to easily delineate individual stocks with liquidity constraints to better skew sector biases within a basket of stocks. This empowers the buy-side trader with additional data points to assess the value of liquidity in various scenarios and better tailor their execution strategy.
Pre-trade tools serve as independent guides that help clients identify indicative cost references, and thus help them make more informed decisions. However, in managing child order execution, UBS’s latest mathematical calculation engine employs its own continuous cost-benefit trade off optimization to minimize trading cost at run time. This data-centric approach, along with the tunability offered by the model, allows us to measure and address performance demands in an ever-changing, complex marketplace.
Proof in the pudding: Putting the model to the test
The new model shows statistically significant improvement over traditional parametric models.
As an example, we looked at some notable stocks in Hong Kong.
0700.HK has a short queue, with lower top book size and higher order size/top of book size, resulting in higher estimated impact.
0939.HK, 1398.HK and 3988.HK usually have long queues, with lower estimated impact.
In this case, book to trade ratio factor has a dominant effect in the new model, which increases impact predictions for 0700.HK while reducing impact predictions for the rest of the names.
Using the new model, the chart below shows price impact trendlines across Australia, China, Hong Kong and Japan of a 5% ADV basket traded over the day.
The Art of the Pre-Trade: Assessing the Cost of Liquidity in APAC Markets first appeared in the Q4 2021 issue of GlobalTrading.
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