Physical Review X (Oct 2011)

Anomalous Price Impact and the Critical Nature of Liquidity in Financial Markets

  • B. Tóth,
  • Y. Lempérière,
  • C. Deremble,
  • J. de Lataillade,
  • J. Kockelkoren,
  • J.-P. Bouchaud

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.1.021006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
p. 021006

Abstract

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We propose a dynamical theory of market liquidity that predicts that the average supply/demand profile is V shaped and vanishes around the current price. This result is generic, and only relies on mild assumptions about the order flow and on the fact that prices are, to a first approximation, diffusive. This naturally accounts for two striking stylized facts: First, large metaorders have to be fragmented in order to be digested by the liquidity funnel, which leads to a long memory in the sign of the order flow. Second, the anomalously small local liquidity induces a breakdown of the linear response and a diverging impact of small orders, explaining the “square-root” impact law, for which we provide additional empirical support. Finally, we test our arguments quantitatively using a numerical model of order flow based on the same minimal ingredients.