Estimation of the Bid–Ask Spread and Its Components: A New Approach

Thomas J. George(The Ohio State University), Gautam Kaul(University of Michigan), Mahendrarajah Nimalendran(University of Florida)
Review of Financial Studies
October 1, 1991
Cited by 618

Abstract

Abstract We show that time variation in expected returns and/or partial price adjustments lead to a downward bias in previous estimators of both the spread and its components. We introduce a new approach that provides unbiased and efficient estimators of the components of the spread. We find that between 77 and 97 percent of the downward bias in previous spread estimates is caused by time variation in expected returns. More importantly, the adverse-selection component, though significant, accounts for a much smaller proportion (8 to 13 percent) of the quoted spread, at least for small trades, than the proportion (over 40 percent) previously reported in the literature. Order processing costs are the predominant component of quoted spreads.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis