nep-mst New Economics Papers
on Market Microstructure
Issue of 2026–01–26
six papers chosen by
Thanos Verousis, Vlerick Business School


  1. Temporal Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (T-KAN) for High-Frequency Limit Order Book Forecasting: Efficiency, Interpretability, and Alpha Decay By Ahmad Makinde
  2. The drift burst hypothesis By Kim Christensen; Roel C. A. Oomen; Roberto Ren\`o
  3. A continuous-time Kyle model with price-responsive traders By Eunjung Noh
  4. Trading with market resistance and concave price impact By Youssef Ouazzani Chahdi; Nathan De Carvalho; Gr\'egoire Szymanski
  5. Wealth or Stealth? The Camouflage Effect in Insider Trading By Jin Ma; Weixuan Xia; Jianfeng Zhang
  6. Warp speed price moves: Jumps after earnings announcements By Kim Christensen; Allan Timmermann; Bezirgen Veliyev

  1. By: Ahmad Makinde
    Abstract: High-Frequency trading (HFT) environments are characterised by large volumes of limit order book (LOB) data, which is notoriously noisy and non-linear. Alpha decay represents a significant challenge, with traditional models such as DeepLOB losing predictive power as the time horizon (k) increases. In this paper, using data from the FI-2010 dataset, we introduce Temporal Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (T-KAN) to replace the fixed, linear weights of standard LSTMs with learnable B-spline activation functions. This allows the model to learn the 'shape' of market signals as opposed to just their magnitude. This resulted in a 19.1% relative improvement in the F1-score at the k = 100 horizon. The efficacy of T-KAN networks cannot be understated, producing a 132.48% return compared to the -82.76% DeepLOB drawdown under 1.0 bps transaction costs. In addition to this, the T-KAN model proves quite interpretable, with the 'dead-zones' being clearly visible in the splines. The T-KAN architecture is also uniquely optimized for low-latency FPGA implementation via High level Synthesis (HLS). The code for the experiments in this project can be found at https://github.com/AhmadMak/Temporal-Kol mogorov-Arnold-Networks-T-KAN-for-High-F requency-Limit-Order-Book-Forecasting.
    Date: 2026–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2601.02310
  2. By: Kim Christensen; Roel C. A. Oomen; Roberto Ren\`o
    Abstract: The drift burst hypothesis postulates the existence of short-lived locally explosive trends in the price paths of financial assets. The recent U.S. equity and treasury flash crashes can be viewed as two high-profile manifestations of such dynamics, but we argue that drift bursts of varying magnitude are an expected and regular occurrence in financial markets that can arise through established mechanisms of liquidity provision. We show how to build drift bursts into the continuous-time It\^o semimartingale model, elaborate on the conditions required for the process to remain arbitrage-free, and propose a nonparametric test statistic that identifies drift bursts from noisy high-frequency data. We apply the test and demonstrate that drift bursts are a stylized fact of the price dynamics across equities, fixed income, currencies and commodities. Drift bursts occur once a week on average, and the majority of them are accompanied by subsequent price reversion and can thus be regarded as "flash crashes." The reversal is found to be stronger for negative drift bursts with large trading volume, which is consistent with endogenous demand for immediacy during market crashes.
    Date: 2026–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2601.08974
  3. By: Eunjung Noh
    Abstract: Classical Kyle-type models of informed trading typically treat noise trader demand as purely exogenous. In reality, many market participants react to price movements and news, generating feedback effects that can significantly alter market dynamics. This paper develops a continuous-time Kyle framework in which two types of price-responsive traders (momentum and contrarian traders) adjust their demand in response to price signals. This extension yields a finite-dimensional Kalman filter for price discovery and leads to a forward-backward Riccati system characterizing equilibrium. We show that when feedback is weak, equilibrium exists and is unique as a smooth perturbation of the classical Kyle solution, allowing us to derive explicit comparative statics for insider profits and price informativeness. For stronger feedback, the model generates rich dynamics, including potential multiplicity of equilibria and amplification effects. Our framework thus bridges the gap between purely exogenous noise and more realistic, behaviorally motivated trading.
    Date: 2026–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2601.09872
  4. By: Youssef Ouazzani Chahdi; Nathan De Carvalho; Gr\'egoire Szymanski
    Abstract: We consider an optimal trading problem under a market impact model with endogenous market resistance generated by a sophisticated trader who (partially) detects metaorders and trades against them to exploit price overreactions induced by the order flow. The model features a concave transient impact driven by a power-law propagator with a resistance term responding to the trader's rate via a fixed-point equation involving a general resistance function. We derive a (non)linear stochastic Fredholm equation as the first-order optimality condition satisfied by optimal trading strategies. Existence and uniqueness of the optimal control are established when the resistance function is linear, and an existence result is obtained when it is strictly convex using coercivity and weak lower semicontinuity of the associated profit-and-loss functional. We also propose an iterative scheme to solve the nonlinear stochastic Fredholm equation and prove an exponential convergence rate. Numerical experiments confirm this behavior and illustrate optimal round-trip strategies under "buy" signals with various decay profiles and different market resistance specifications.
    Date: 2026–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2601.03215
  5. By: Jin Ma; Weixuan Xia; Jianfeng Zhang
    Abstract: We consider a Kyle-type model where insider trading takes place among a potentially large population of liquidity traders and is subject to legal penalties. Insiders exploit the liquidity provided by the trading masses to "camouflage" their actions and balance expected wealth with the necessary stealth to avoid detection. Under a diverse spectrum of prosecution schemes, we establish the existence of equilibria for arbitrary population sizes and a unique limiting equilibrium. A convergence analysis determines the scale of insider trading by a stealth index $\gamma$, revealing that the equilibrium can be closely approximated by a simple limit due to diminished price informativeness. Empirical aspects are derived from two calibration experiments using non-overlapping data sets spanning from 1980 to 2018, which underline the indispensable role of a large population in insider trading models with legal risk, along with important implications for the incidence of stealth trading and the deterrent effect of legal enforcement.
    Date: 2025–12
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2512.06309
  6. By: Kim Christensen; Allan Timmermann; Bezirgen Veliyev
    Abstract: Corporate earnings announcements unpack large bundles of public information that should, in efficient markets, trigger jumps in stock prices. Testing this implication is difficult in practice, as it requires noisy high-frequency data from after-hours markets, where most earnings announcements are released. Using a unique dataset and a new microstructure noise-robust jump test, we show that earnings announcements almost always induce jumps in the stock price of announcing firms. They also significantly raise the probability of price co-jumps in non-announcing firms and the market. We find that returns from a post-announcement trading strategy are consistent with efficient price formation after 2016.
    Date: 2026–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:2601.08962

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