Banning short sales and market quality: The UK’s experience

► We study the effects of the UK’s short sales ban of 2008/2009 for financials. ► The ban did not affect order flows but volume and liquidity were much reduced. ► The deterioration affected both sides of the order book equally. ► The ban made markets for financials less efficient and trades less inf...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of banking & finance 2012-07, Vol.36 (7), p.1975-1986
Hauptverfasser: Marsh, Ian W., Payne, Richard
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container_end_page 1986
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1975
container_title Journal of banking & finance
container_volume 36
creator Marsh, Ian W.
Payne, Richard
description ► We study the effects of the UK’s short sales ban of 2008/2009 for financials. ► The ban did not affect order flows but volume and liquidity were much reduced. ► The deterioration affected both sides of the order book equally. ► The ban made markets for financials less efficient and trades less informative. ► Negative effects on liquidity and efficiency were reversed once the ban was lifted. We study the effects that the ban on short sales of shares in financial firms introduced in late 2008 and removed early 2009 had on the microstructure and the quality of UK equity markets. We show that the ban did nothing to affect order flows: financial stocks were being more aggressively sold off than their peers pre-ban and this situation persisted through the ban period. Trading volume in financials was massively reduced, however. The ban decimated order book liquidity for financials. The deterioration was symmetric, affecting the limit buy and limit sell side of the order book equally. Finally we show that, through the period of the ban, markets for financial stocks were substantially less efficient and that the role of the trading process in aiding price discovery was greatly reduced. The effects identified above were largely reversed once the ban was lifted. The persistence of the deterioration in market quality and liquidity though the relatively long-lasting UK ban on short selling suggests that other major market developments such as the TARP program were not responsible since these were concentrated in the early half of the ban. We thus argue that the short selling ban was responsible for detrimental effects on the quality of UK equity markets and that, far from being stabilising, the ban exacerbated problems in valuing UK financial stocks.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2012.03.005
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1872-6372
language eng
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Bans
Efficient markets
Equity
Liquidity
Market efficiency
Regulation
Securities markets
Securities trading
Short sales
Short-selling
Stocks
Studies
Traders
United Kingdom
title Banning short sales and market quality: The UK’s experience
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