Journal article

An examination of minimum tick sizes on the Tokyo Stock Exchange

A Ascioglu, C Comerton-Forde, TH McInish

Japan and the World Economy | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV | Published : 2010

Abstract

In setting a minimum tick size, exchanges balance the competing objectives of lowering transaction costs and encouraging liquidity provision by minimizing stepping-ahead risk. We examine the trade-off between these two types of costs by examining the proportion of time that the quoted spread equals the minimum tick size (PTIMEMIN). We undertake this analysis on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, a market that sets nine different tick sizes based on stock price. PTIMEMIN varies markedly across stocks, ranging from almost 0 to almost 100 percent. We find that trade size, the number of trades, and price are the most important determinants of whether the minimum tick size is a binding constraint. In fact..

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University of Melbourne Researchers