CHAPTER 17

Modeling Market Impact Costs

Petter N. Kolm, Ph.D.

Director of the Mathematics in Finance Masters Program and Clinical Associate Professor, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University

Frank J. Fabozzi, Ph.D., CFA, CPA

Professor of Finance, EDHEC Business School

Trading is an integral component of the equity investment process. A poorly executed trade can eat directly into portfolio returns. This is because equity markets are not frictionless and transactions have a cost associated to them. Costs are incurred when buying or selling stocks in the form of, for example, brokerage commissions, bid-ask spreads, taxes, and market impact costs.

In recent years, portfolio managers have started to more carefully consider transaction costs. The literature on market microstructure, analysis and measurement of transaction costs, and market impact costs on institutional trades is rapidly expanding.1 One way of describing transaction costs is to categorize them in terms of explicit costs such as brokerage and taxes, and implicit costs, which include market impact costs, price movement risk, and opportunity cost. Market impact cost is, broadly speaking, the price an investor has to pay for obtaining liquidity in the market, whereas price movement risk is the risk that the price of an asset increases or decreases from the time the investor decides to transact in the asset until the transaction actually takes place. Opportunity cost is the cost suffered when a trade ...

Get Equity Valuation and Portfolio Management now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.