FIN-03-022 |
NYU Stern School of Business |
October 2003
William L. Silber
ABSTRACT
The suspension of trading on the New York Stock Exchange for more than four
months following the outbreak of World War I fostered a substitute market on
New Street as a source of liquidity. The New Street market suffered from impaired
price transparency because its transactions were not disseminated on the NYSE
ticker and its quotations were blacklisted at the leading newspapers. This paper
shows that despite the incomplete information flow and the somewhat wider bid-ask
spreads compared with the New York Stock Exchange, New Street offered economically
meaningful liquidity services. The interference with price transparency turned
an individual stocks reputation for liquidity into an important added
variable in explaining the structure of bid-ask spreads on New Street.
William L. Silber
Institution: Stern School of Business, New York University
Email: wsilber@stern.nyu.edu
Phone: (212) 998-0714
Fax: (212) 995-4216
Home Page: http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~wsilber/
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