The Total Cost of Trading Belgian Shares: Brussels versus London
Hans Degryse
Journal of Banking and Finance,
No. 9,
1999
Abstract
Since 1990, London’s SEAQ International (SEAQ-I) has attracted considerable trading volume in Belgian equities. This paper investigates competition between the Brussels CATS market and London’s SEAQ-I. Toward this end, we gathered extensive limit order book data as well as transactions and quotation information. With regard to liquidity (indirect costs), measured by the quoted and effective bid–ask spread, the paper concludes that CATS outperforms SEAQ International for both measures. The effective spread is of course substantially smaller than the quoted spread, with the CATS effective spread showing a U-shaped form. This paper, unique in employing an extensive data set that includes all hidden orders and the whole limit order book, produces results in line with the different market microstructure models. Total trading costs on CATS are lower (higher) for small (large) trade sizes.
Read article
Company size and labor productivity in the East German manufacturing sector
Joachim Ragnitz, Siegfried Beer
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 16,
1997
Abstract
Das ostdeutsche Verarbeitende Gewerbe wird von kleinen und mittleren Unternehmen geprägt. Darin wird eine Ursache für den Produktivitätsrückstand gegenüber Westdeutschland vermutet. Berechnungen auf der Grundlage von Daten aus dem Jahr 1995 haben ergeben, dass die Betriebsgrößenstruktur keinen sehr großen Einfluss auf das durchschnittliche Produktivitätsniveau hat und somit nur ein relativ kleiner Teil der Produktivitätslücke erklärt werden kann.
Read article
Changing Structures, Functions, and Townscape. The Transformation of a Middle-Sized City in Thuringia
Peter Franz, Inge Cornelsen, Ulfert Herlyn
Netherlands Journal of Housing and the Built Environment,
1995
Abstract
Read article