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Published July 2002 | public
Journal Article

Order imbalance, liquidity, and market returns

Abstract

Traditionally, volume has provided the link between trading activity and returns. We focus on a hitherto unexplored but intuitive measure of trading activity: the aggregate daily order imbalance, buy orders less sell orders, on the New York Stock Exchange. Order imbalance increases following market declines and vice versa, which reveals that investors are contrarians on aggregate. Order imbalances in either direction, excess buy or sell orders, reduce liquidity. Market-wide returns are strongly affected by contemporaneous and lagged order imbalances. Market returns reverse themselves after high-negative-imbalance, large-negative-return days. Even after controlling for aggregate volume and liquidity, market returns are affected by order imbalance.

Additional Information

© 2002 Published by Elsevier B.V. Received 16 October 2000, Accepted 1 May 2001, Available online 30 May 2002. This paper owes significant debt to Charles Lee and Mark Ready for developing the trade signing algorithm. For helpful comments, we owe a debt of gratitude to an anonymous referee, Hank Bessembinder, Jeff Busse, Clifton Green, Paul Irvine, Jonathan Karpoff, Olivier Ledoit, Ross Valkanov, and Sunil Wahal.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023