Private Information and High-Frequency Stochastic Volatility
Abstract
We study the effect of privately informed traders on measured high frequency price changes and trades in asset markets. We use a standard market microstructure framework where exogenous news is captured by signals that informed agents receive. We show that the entry and exit of informed traders following the arrival of news accounts for high-frequency serial correlation in squared price changes (stochastic volatility) and trades. Because the bid-ask spread of the market specialist tends to shrink as individuals trade and reveal their information, the model also accounts for the empirical observation that high-frequency serial correlation is more pronounced in trades than in squared price changes. A calibration test of the model shows that the features of the market microstructure, without serially correlated news, accounts qualitatively for the serial correlation in the data, but predicts less persistence than is present in the data.Recommended Citation
David L. Kelly and Douglas G. Steigerwald
(2004)
"Private Information and High-Frequency Stochastic Volatility",
Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics & Econometrics:
Vol. 8:
No. 1,
Article 1.
http://www.bepress.com/snde/vol8/iss1/art1
Related Files
kelly_datacode.zip (2061 kB)
Data and code
