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Trading
Systems in European Stock Exchanges
At a meeting organized by CEPR and Banque Paribas in Paris on 10 May,
Marco Pagano presented a paper on `Trading Systems in European
Stock Exchanges: Current Performance and Policy Options', written
jointly with Ailsa Roell. The paper was published in April in Economic
Policy No. 10, the second of two special issues devoted to the effects
of the integration of the EC internal market in 1992 (available for
£10.50 from the Journals Publicity Department, Cambridge
University Press, The Edinburgh Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge,
CB2 1BR, tel: 0223 325807). Hospitality and financial support for the
meeting were provided by Paribas, which is also sponsoring the
continuing publication programme of the European Network in Financial
Markets, administered by CEPR on behalf of the European Science
Foundation.
Marco Pagano is a Research Fellow in CEPR's International Macroeconomics
programme. In his talk he considered the implications for the
development of the European stock exchanges of the deregulation of
financial markets and the liberalization of international capital flows.
He discussed a variety of issues relating to the design of market
operations on the basis of a detailed analysis of the experience of both
European and North American exchanges. In particular, he assessed the
relative merits of auctions versus market-making, concentration versus
fragmentation of trading, batch auctions versus continuous markets, and
single- versus dual-capacity dealers.
He also assessed the implications of these new developments for the
relative competitiveness of European financial markets, and concluded
that although much trading activity had moved to London in the wake of
the `Big Bang' of 1986, several continental exchanges have recovered
lost ground in the wake of their own subsequent deregulations. The
process of concentration towards London will be slowed down
significantly as a result.
Pagano's paper introduced a panel discussion on the theme of `Innovation
and Liberalization: A Comparison of the European Stock Exchanges', which
was chaired by Carl Gewirtz, Associate Editor of the
International Herald Tribune. The other panel speakers were Claude
Bouvet, Vice President and Director General of Courcoux-Bouvet, and Sheila
Nicoll, Head of the European Affairs Unit at the International Stock
Exchange.
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