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High-Frequency Trading in the Bund Futures Market
In: Bundesbank Discussion Paper No. 15/2016
SSRN
The Eurosystem's Asset Purchase Programmes, Securities Lending and Bund Specialness
In: Deutsche Bundesbank Discussion Paper No. 39/2022
SSRN
Liquidity in the German Corporate Bond Market: Has the CSPP Made a Difference?
In: Deutsche Bundesbank Discussion Paper No. 08/2021
SSRN
Liquidity in the German Corporate Bond Market: Has The Cspp Made a Difference?
In: JFIN-D-22-00080
SSRN
Scarcity effects of QE: A transaction-level analysis in the Bund market
This paper investigates the scarcity effects of quantitative easing (QE) policies, drawing on intra-day transaction-level data for German government bonds, purchased under the Public Sector Purchase Program (PSPP) of the ECB/Eurosystem. This paper is the first to match high-frequency QE purchase data with high-frequency inter-dealer data. We find economically significant price impacts at high (minute-by-minute) and low (daily) frequencies, highlighting the relevance of scarcity effects in bond markets. Asset purchase policies are not without side effects, though, as the induced scarcity has an adverse impact on liquidity conditions as measured by bid-ask spreads and inter-dealer order book depth. We further show that the price impact varies greatly with market conditions: it is considerably higher during episodes of illiquidity and when yields are higher.
BASE
Scarcity Effects of QE: A Transaction-Level Analysis in the Bund Market
In: Bundesbank Discussion Paper No. 06/2017
SSRN
Working paper
High-frequency trading in the Bund futures market
In: Discussion paper 2016,15
In this work, I study the impact of high-frequency trading (HFT) on price discovery and volatility in the Bund futures market. Using a new dataset based on microseconds, the focus of the study is on the reaction of high-frequency traders (HFTs) to major macroeconomic news events. I show that through their fast and strong reaction to news, HFTs contribute more to price discovery compared to Non-HFTs, but also add a higher share to noise than to permanent volatility. Moreover, I find evidence that HFTs tend to supply less liquidity after an unexpected rise in market volatility and prior to upcoming macroeconomic news events. These findings suggest that in times of high market stress, HFT behavior may exacerbate intraday price volatility and amplify the risk of market disruptions in fixed income markets.