Skip to Content
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Museum
  • Careers
  • Banking
  • Research
  • Markets
  • Publications
    • Periodicals
    • Data Releases
    • Speeches
  • Events
  • Education
  • People
  • Region
The Immediacy Implications of Exchange Organization
  • Share
  • Print
    • Text Size
    • Smaller
    • Larger
WP image
On This Page
WP 2002-09
  • Download Entire Publication
Last Updated: 08/16/2002

The Immediacy Implications of Exchange Organization

James T. Moser

The paper introduces a connection between the needs of exchanges to respond to the immediacy needs of their clientele and the need to manage the credit risks faced by exchange members. Queueing theory is used to represent the opportunity loss suffered by brokers engaging in multiple activities: order-flow origination and its intermediation. The role of market-making locals is depicted as enabling specialization. Brokers focus on originating order flow and locals on fulfilling intermediation needs. The capacity to specialize is constrained by the availability of creditworthy members acting as locals. This results in a tension between pursuit of immediacy and managing inter-member credit exposure. Two exchange rules, tick size and price limits, are evaluated for their effects in resolving this tension.

Subscribe Now

Register to receive email alerts when new issues are published.

Subscribe
More by this Author

James T. Moser

  • Credit Derivatives: The Latest New Thing
  • The Economics of Disclosure Requirements for Derivatives
Related Topics
  • Economy to Cruise at Speed Limit through 2006 (Special Issue)
  • The Importance of Check-Cashing Businesses to the Unbanked: Racial/Ethnic Differences
  • Why do consumers pay bills electronically? An empirical analysis
  • State-local business taxation and the benefits principle
View All

Follow Us:

FaceBook RSS Twitter YouTube
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Subscribe
  • Tours
  • Careers
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604-1413, USA. Tel. (312) 322-5322
Copyright © 2012. All rights reserved. Please review our
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notices