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Spoofing: effective market power building through perception alignment

Viktoria Dalko (Department of Finance, Hult International Business School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA and Extension School, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA)
Bryane Michael (University of Oxford, Oxford, UK and University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China)
Michael Wang (Research Institute of Comprehensive Economics, Quincy, Massachusetts, USA)

Studies in Economics and Finance

ISSN: 1086-7376

Article publication date: 18 June 2020

Issue publication date: 19 September 2020

215

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to show that market power exists in financial markets and analyze how spoofing is used by a high-frequency trader to build market power by taking advantage of both behavioral weaknesses of individual investors and microstructural loopholes of trading venues.

Design/methodology/approach

After showing that market power exists in the financial market, this paper centers around the question of how market power is constructed in the financial market. To sharpen the answer to the question, the paper compares the conditions needed for market power construction in the financial market with those needed in the goods market. The paper selects spoofing, the frequently used order-based tactic in high-frequency trading strategies, to analyze in detail how spoof orders can ignite herding with market power building as the essence. The Flash Crash that occurred in the New York Stock Exchange on May 6, 2010 provides an excellent case of market power construction exhibited in spoofing.

Findings

The behavioral mechanism of market power construction in the case of spoofing is perception alignment. It becomes effective when two necessary conditions are met: the spoof trader takes advantage of the incomplete order display set up by the exchange; and the behavioral weaknesses exhibited by numerous individual investors. In addition to these key conditions, this paper finds other ones for market power to be created in the financial market. They are easier, quicker, more secret, more flexible and less risky relative to the conditions for market power building in the goods market.

Practical implications

The detailed analysis points to the behavioral mechanism, i.e. perception alignment, and microstructural mechanism, i.e. incomplete order display, that could be responsive to regulation.

Originality/value

The originality of the findings is to uncover the mechanism of spoofing in taking advantage of behavioral biases of individual investors. The value is to gain more complete understanding of the essence of herding caused by spoofing.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Xin Yan for inspiration and Niklas F. Wagner, the editor, and the two anonymous reviewers for helpful suggestions.

Citation

Dalko, V., Michael, B. and Wang, M. (2020), "Spoofing: effective market power building through perception alignment", Studies in Economics and Finance, Vol. 37 No. 3, pp. 497-511. https://doi.org/10.1108/SEF-09-2019-0346

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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