8 Level 2 Data
8 Level 2 Data
Level 2 data
Thalesians Ltd
Level39, One Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5AB
2023.02.07
Level 2 data
Multipliers
Market microstructure
I In quote-driven markets, market makers provide firm bid-ask prices to traders prior to
order submission. Traders can trade at the posted prices immediately.
I The term market maker reflects an obligation to ensure a fair and orderly market
based on a contractual commitment. In contrast, dealers as intermediaries also
supply liquidity to the market but they are not obliged to do so.
I In order-driven markets, the orders of all traders are accumulated and matched in
accordance with order precedence rules.
I In particular, in price/time priority, orders are first ranked according to their price;
orders of the same price are then ranked depending on when they were entered. In
pro-rata model, orders go to specialists first, whereas in a price/time priority model,
dealers have few special privileges.
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Source: [Hac07]
Level 2 data
Trading on Xetra
I For instruments with a low liquidity, one or multiple auctions are conducted.
I For highly liquid instruments, continuous trading with opening, intraday, and closing
auctions is implemented.
I For medium liquidity instruments, trading is supported by so-called designated
sponsors, which are obliged to provide a minimum liquidity determined through a
minimum volume, maximum bid-ask spread, and a minimum percentage of quoting in
auctions and continuous trading by simultaneously providing limit buy and sell orders,
defined as quotes.
Level 2 data
I Market orders (MO) are sent by participants that are willing to either buy or sell the
asset immediately, at the best available price.
I Limit orders (LO) show the interest of the participant to buy or sell the asset at a
particular price.
I Therefore limit orders are not generally executed immediately; they have to wait until
some other participant is willing to fill the order at the price given by the LO/MO if such
a participant ever arrives.
I The participant that sent the LO can decide to amend or cancel it.
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I At a given time t,
I the bid price is defined to be the price of the best available buying limit order,
I the ask (offer) price is defined to be the price of the best available selling limit order.
I The bid and ask prices are denoted by Ptb and Pta , respectively.
I We can refer to the other bid and ask prices as level 2 bid, level 3 bid, level 4 bid, ...,
and level 2 ask, level 3 ask, level 4 ask, ..., the level 1 bid being the best bid and
level 1 ask being the best ask.
I We refer to the corresponding volumes as level 1 bid size, level 2 bid size, level 3
bid size, ..., and level 1 ask size, level 2 ask size, level 3 ask size, ....
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I The difference between the bid and ask prices is called the quoted spread or the
bid-ask (bid-offer) spread:
I Generally, the size of the quoted spread depends on how liquid the security is:
securities with high liquidity tend to have small quoted spreads, since the large number
of LOs in the LOB tend to decrease the quoted spread. Illiquid assets, however, will
usually have larger spreads.
I In some sense, the size of the quoted spread will determine the cost of trading, since
the quoted spread is the price a trader will have to pay if he or she immediately buys
and sells an asset at the best available price, assuming there are no other trading
costs.
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Prices
I It is often useful to try to give a single number as a representative of the price of the
traded security.
I The midprice is the average of the best bid and best ask prices:
Pta + Ptb
Midpricet = .
2
I This price may be unrealistic when the volume of limit orders at the best bid and ask
prices differ significantly.
I The microprice is often more useful, since it weights the best bid and best ask prices
with the volumes posted at the best bid and best ask prices:
where Vtb and Vta represent the volumes posted at the best bid and best ask prices,
respectively.
I For example, if the volume of limit orders posted at the best bid price is significantly
larger than the volume of limit orders at the best ask price, the microprice will be
pushed towards the ask price.
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Metrics
I Auction dislocation — the price change between the end of the continuous trading
period and the end of the closing auction.
I Order resting time — the minimum and mean resting times that an order placed at a
given price level stays on the book before it is filled or cancelled.
I Fill probability — the probability that an order will be filled within 60 seconds at a
particular price level.
I Order imbalance — the imbalance of the number of buy and sell orders for a security
at a given time.
I Quote-to-trade ratio — the ratio of order book messages to aggressive executions.
I Volume imbalance — the imbalance of buy and sell order sizes for a security at a
given time.
I Order Book Imbalance — the difference between the best bid size and best ask size
divided by their sum.
I Sweep to fill — the depth of the book required to fill an order of a given dollar volume.
I Market impact — the average price impact of a trade.
I OTC volume — volume traded over-the-counter.
I OHLCV — Open, High, Low, Close, Volume.
I VWAP — Volume-Weighted Average Price.
I Volatility — historical volatility of returns over a given period.
Level 2 data
Bibliography