nep-mst New Economics Papers
on Market Microstructure
Issue of 2026–03–30
five papers chosen by
Thanos Verousis, Vlerick Business School


  1. Impact of arbitrage between leveraged ETF and futures on market liquidity during market crash By Ryuki Hayase; Takanobu Mizuta; Isao Yagi
  2. Competition between DEXs through Dynamic Fees By Leonardo Baggiani; Martin Herdegen; Leandro Sanchez-Betancourt
  3. ParlayMarket: Automated Market Making for Parlay-style Joint Contracts By Ranvir Rana; Viraj Nadkarni; Niusha Moshrefi; Pramod Viswanath
  4. Microstructural Foundation of Rough Log-Normal Volatility Models By Paul P. Hager; Ulrich Horst; Thomas Wagenhofer; Wei Xu
  5. Political Shocks and Price Discovery in Prediction Markets: Evidence from the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election By Kwok Ping Tsang; Zichao Yang

  1. By: Ryuki Hayase; Takanobu Mizuta; Isao Yagi
    Abstract: Leveraged ETFs (L-ETFs) are exchange-traded funds that achieve price movements several times greater than an index by holding index-linked futures such as Nikkei Stock Average Index futures. It is known that when the price of an L-ETF falls, the L-ETF uses the liquidity of futures to limit the decline through arbitrage trading. Conversely, when the price of a futures contract falls, the futures contract uses the liquidity of the L-ETF to limit its decline. However, the impact of arbitrage trading on the liquidity of these markets has been little studied. Therefore, the present study used artificial market simulations to investigate how the liquidity (Volume, SellDepth, BuyDepth, Tightness) of both markets changes when prices plummet in either (i.e., the L-ETF or futures market), depending on the presence or absence of arbitrage trading. As a result, it was found that when erroneous orders occur in the L-ETF market, the existence of arbitrage trading causes liquidity to be supplied from the futures market to the L-ETF market in terms of SellDepth and Tightness. When erroneous orders occur in the futures market, the existence of arbitrage trading causes liquidity to be supplied from the L-ETF market to the futures market in terms of SellDepth and Tightness, and liquidity to be supplied from the futures market to the L-ETF market in terms of Volume. We also analyzed the internal market mechanisms that led to these results.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.05862
  2. By: Leonardo Baggiani; Martin Herdegen; Leandro Sanchez-Betancourt
    Abstract: We find an approximate Nash equilibrium in a game between decentralized exchanges (DEXs) that compete for order flow by setting dynamic trading fees. We characterize the equilibrium via a coupled system of partial differential equations and derive tractable approximate closed-form expressions for the equilibrium fees. Our analysis shows that the two-regime structure found in monopoly models persists under competition: pools alternate between raising fees to deter arbitrage and lowering fees to attract noise trading and increase volatility. Under competition, however, the switching boundary shifts from the oracle price to a weighted average of the oracle and competitors' exchange rates. Our numerical experiments show that, holding total liquidity fixed, an increase in the number of competing DEXs reduces execution slippage for strategic liquidity takers and lowers fee revenue per DEX. Finally, the effect on noise traders' slippage depends on market activity: they are worse off in low-activity markets but better off in high-activity ones.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.09669
  3. By: Ranvir Rana; Viraj Nadkarni; Niusha Moshrefi; Pramod Viswanath
    Abstract: Prediction markets are powerful mechanisms for information aggregation, but existing designs are optimized for single-event contracts. In practice, traders frequently express beliefs about joint outcomes - through parlays in sports, conditional forecasts across related events, or scenario bets in financial markets. Current platforms either prohibit such trades or rely on ad hoc mechanisms that ignore correlation structure, resulting in inefficient prices and fragmented liquidity. We introduce ParlayMarket, the first automated market-making design that supports parlay-style joint contracts within a unified liquidity pool while maintaining coherent pricing across base markets and their combinations. Our main result is a convergence characterization of the resulting system. Under repeated trading, the AMM dynamics converge to a unique fixed point corresponding to the best approximation to the true joint distribution within the model class. We show that (i) parameter error remains bounded at stationarity due to a balance between signal and noise in trade-induced updates, and (ii) pricing error and monetary loss scale with this parameter error, implying that aggregate market-maker loss remains controlled and grows at most quadratically in the number of base markets. These results establish explicit limits on the information-retrieval error achievable through the trading interface. Importantly, parlay trades play a structural role in this convergence: by providing direct constraints on joint outcomes, they improve identifiability of dependence structure and reduce steady-state error relative to markets that rely only on marginal trades. Empirically, we show both in controlled simulations and in replay on historical Kalshi parlay data that this design achieves the intended scaling while remaining effective in realistic market settings.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.22596
  4. By: Paul P. Hager; Ulrich Horst; Thomas Wagenhofer; Wei Xu
    Abstract: We establish a microstructural foundation of the rough Bergomi model. Specifically, we consider a sequence of order driven financial market models where orders to buy or sell an asset arrive according to a Poisson process and have a long lasting impact on volatility. Using a recently established C-tightness result for c\`adl\`ag processes we establish the weak convergence of the price-volatility process to a log-normal rough volatility model. Our weak convergence result is accompanied by weak error rates that employ a recently established Clark-Ocone formula for Poisson processes and turn our microstructure model into viable alternative to classical simulation schemes. The weak error rates strongly hinge on Poisson arrival dynamics and are novel to the rough microstructure literature.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.13170
  5. By: Kwok Ping Tsang; Zichao Yang
    Abstract: Using transaction-level matched trades from Polymarket's 2024 U.S. presidential-election contracts, we study how prediction markets process major political shocks. We focus on three events with precise timestamps: the first Biden-Trump debate, the Trump assassination attempt, and Biden's drop out. We document large bursts of activity on both extensive and intensive margins, concentrated among high-intensity incumbents, and show that pre-event net exposure predicts abnormal post-event trading and position flips. To link order flow to prices, we estimate a Kyle-style price-impact measure and a Glosten-Harris decomposition that separates permanent from transitory order-flow effects, complemented by variance-ratio dynamics and a bounded two-sidedness index. Across shocks, price discovery differs sharply: the debate exhibits stronger transitory pressure and partial reversal, the assassination attempt features a more permanent repricing, and the drop out episode combines heavy trading with muted net price changes and high two-sidedness, consistent with disagreement under Knightian uncertainty.
    Date: 2026–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2603.03152

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