Liquidity and Trading in Fixed Income: Why Bonds Are Harder to Trade Than Stocks
You can build the most brilliant bond portfolio model in the world. But if you can’t actually trade the bonds you want, none of it matters.
You can build the most brilliant bond portfolio model in the world. But if you can’t actually trade the bonds you want, none of it matters.
That is it. Twenty-nine chapters, seven parts, and around forty posts later, we are done with “Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners” by Larry Harris (ISBN: 0-19-514470-8, Oxford University Press, 2003).
This is the last chapter of the book, and Harris saved a spicy one for the end. Chapter 29 is about insider trading. You might think it is simple: insiders trade on secret info, SEC catches them, they go to jail. But Harris shows that the whole topic is way more complicated than that. There are actually serious economists who argue insider trading should be legal. Let me explain.
In Part 1 we looked at how bubbles form and crashes happen. Now the obvious follow-up: can we actually prevent this stuff? Or at least make it less painful? Harris walks through the tools markets use to deal with extreme volatility, and the picture is more complicated than you would expect.
This is the most dramatic chapter in the entire book. Bubbles inflate, crashes wipe out fortunes, and panic replaces logic. If you ever watched a stock chart go vertical and wondered “how does this end?”, Harris answers that question here. Spoiler: badly for whoever is holding the bag last.
Chapter 27 is a fascinating time capsule. Harris wrote this around 2003, when the debate between floor trading and electronic trading was still alive. The NYSE was building a new trading floor. The Chicago exchanges were still mostly pit-based. Reading it now, knowing how completely electronic trading won, is like reading someone in 1995 carefully weighing the pros and cons of email versus fax machines.
Should all trading in a stock happen in one place, or is it okay to have dozens of venues competing for your order? Chapter 26 is about exactly this tension, and honestly, it is one of the most relevant chapters in the whole book if you want to understand why modern markets look the way they do.
If you use Robinhood or any zero-commission broker, this chapter explains how the sausage is made. You pay zero commission, sure. But someone is paying your broker for the privilege of filling your order. That someone is a wholesale dealer, and the payment is called “payment for order flow.” Chapter 25 breaks down how this works and whether it hurts you.
The New York Stock Exchange used to have these people called specialists. Each one was assigned a handful of stocks and was basically the boss of all trading in those stocks. They stood at a physical post on the floor, saw every order coming in, ran the opening auction, and traded with their own money when nobody else would. One of the most privileged positions in finance. And one of the most controversial.
If you have money in a Vanguard or Fidelity index fund, or you buy SPY or VOO through your brokerage app, Chapter 23 is basically about you. Harris wrote this in 2003, but it reads like a prediction of what actually happened. Index investing went from a niche idea to the default way normal people invest. This chapter explains why.
This is the part of the book where Harris basically tells you that almost everything you think you know about picking winning traders is wrong. If Part 1 was about how hard it is to evaluate past performance, Part 2 is about why predicting future performance is nearly hopeless. And honestly, it is one of the most important chapters in the entire book.
Chapter 22 should be required reading before anyone picks a mutual fund, hires a money manager, or brags about stock returns at a dinner party. Harris basically proves, with math, that telling skill from luck in investing is almost impossible.
You know how every finance influencer tells you “minimize your trading costs”? Cool advice. But nobody tells you how to actually measure those costs. That is what chapter 21 is about. It turns out measuring transaction costs is surprisingly hard, and every method has problems.
Chapter 20 is one of the shorter chapters in the book, but it covers something every trader thinks about constantly: volatility. Why do prices move? Why do they sometimes move way more than the actual news justifies? Harris breaks it down into two types and explains why the distinction matters more than most people realize.
Everyone in finance talks about liquidity. Traders want it, exchanges advertise it, regulators worry when it disappears. Yet if you ask five people what liquidity actually means, you will get five different answers. Chapter 19 is where Harris finally pins it down. His definition is simple: liquidity is the ability to trade large size quickly, at low cost, when you want to trade. That is it. But the simplicity hides a lot of complexity.
If you are a big institutional trader at a mutual fund or pension fund, your daily problem is not “what to buy.” The portfolio manager already decided that. Your problem is how to buy it without the whole market figuring out what you are doing and trading against you.
We’ve just spent 38 posts deconstructing Larry Harris’s masterpiece, “Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners.”
In Part 1 we covered what arbitrage is, the different types (pure vs speculative), and how arbitrageurs keep prices consistent across markets. Sounds like easy money, right? Buy low here, sell high there, pocket the difference. This part is about why it is not that simple. Harris lays out four specific risks that make arbitrage genuinely dangerous, and he has some incredible real-world examples to prove it.
In the final chapter of “Trading and Exchanges,” Larry Harris looks at one of the most controversial topics in finance: Insider Trading. It’s the ultimate “informational advantage,” but is it actually harmful to the economy?
Chapter 17 is about arbitrageurs, and it is one of those chapters that changes how you think about markets. Arbitrageurs are the people who keep prices consistent across different markets and different instruments. Without them, you could have oil priced at 80 dollars in New York and 70 dollars in London, and nobody would fix it.
In the second half of Chapter 28, Larry Harris looks at what happens after the crash starts. When the market is in freefall, regulators have several “panic buttons” they can press to try and restore order.
Chapter 16 is basically the Warren Buffett chapter. Not that Harris mentions Buffett by name, but the whole idea of value trading is: figure out what something is really worth, wait for the market to misprice it, buy low, sell high. That is the entire philosophy in one sentence. The hard part is everything else.
Say you manage a pension fund and you need to sell 500,000 shares of some stock. You cannot just drop a market order on the exchange. The order book does not have that much liquidity sitting around. If you try to force it through, you will eat through every level of the book and crash the price on yourself. Chapter 15 is about how these giant trades actually get done.
In Chapter 28, Larry Harris looks at the scariest moments in financial history: Bubbles and Crashes. These aren’t just “volatility”; they are moments where the relationship between price and reality completely breaks down.
In Chapter 27, Larry Harris looks at the ultimate showdown: The Floor vs. The Computer. In an age of high-speed fiber optics, why do we still have people in colorful jackets yelling at each other in lower Manhattan?
In Part 1 we covered dealer spreads, the two spread components (transaction costs and adverse selection), and why uninformed traders lose no matter what order type they use. Now Harris finishes the chapter with equally important stuff: what determines equilibrium spreads in real markets, how public traders compete with dealers, and what factors predict whether a given instrument will have wide or narrow spreads.
That is 29 chapters. Seven major parts. Hundreds of concepts. One very thorough book about how financial markets actually work beneath the surface.
Most people think insider trading is straightforwardly evil. Rich executives cheating the system by trading on secret information. Easy call, right?
In Chapter 26, Larry Harris looks at the high-stakes competition between the marketplaces themselves. If you’re a developer building an ECN or a regulator at the SEC, this is the battlefield.
Harris calls chapter 14 the most important chapter in the book. Bold claim for page 297, but he backs it up. The lesson is simple and painful: uninformed traders lose money no matter what they do. Not because they pick the wrong side. Because they trade at all.
Previous: Floor vs Automated Trading
Chapter 28 is the most dramatic chapter in Trading and Exchanges. It covers the moments when markets go completely sideways. Bubbles that inflate until they pop. Crashes that destroy enormous wealth in hours. And the regulatory responses that try to prevent it all from happening again.
In Chapter 25, Larry Harris explains why the stock market isn’t just one big room. It’s actually thousands of little private rooms all trying to steal business from the main floor. This is Market Fragmentation.
Dealers are merchants. They buy low, sell high, pocket the difference. If you ever bought a used phone from a resale shop, you understand the concept. The shop bought it for less, sells it to you for more. Financial market dealers do the same thing with stocks, bonds, and currencies.
Previous: Competition Among Markets
In 1999, the Bangladeshi Stock Exchange replaced its trading floor with an automated system. At the same time, the New York Stock Exchange was considering where to build a new trading floor.
In Chapter 24, we go to the floor of the New York Stock Exchange to meet the Specialists. These aren’t just regular traders; they are members who have been given a specific job by the exchange: keep the market for your stocks “fair and orderly.”
This is the chapter where Harris explains how scammers work the stock market. Chapter 12 is about bluffers: traders who trick other people into bad trades so they can profit. If you ever wondered how pump and dump schemes actually function at a mechanical level, this is it.
Previous: Internalization and Crossing
You might think there is one stock market. There is not. There are many. And they are all fighting each other for your orders.
In Chapter 23, Larry Harris explores one of the biggest financial innovations of the last 50 years: Index Trading. Today, more money moves in index products (like the SPY ETF or S&P 500 futures) than in the individual stocks themselves.
Chapter 11 is about the shady side of trading. Harris introduces order anticipators: people who profit not by knowing what a stock is worth, but by figuring out what other traders are about to do and trading before them. They are parasites. Harris uses that word deliberately. No better prices. No liquidity. They just extract money from other people’s trades.
Not every trade happens on an exchange. A lot of trading happens away from organized markets, and how it happens raises some genuinely difficult questions about whether investors are getting a fair deal.
In the second half of Chapter 22, Larry Harris digs into why that 5-star mutual fund you saw in a magazine might be a terrible investment. The industry is designed to hide the losers and highlight the lucky.
In Part 1 we covered the four types of informed traders: value traders, news traders, technical traders, and arbitrageurs. Now we get to the really good stuff. What happens when all these informed traders compete? How efficient do prices actually get? And why can markets never be perfectly efficient?
In Chapter 22, Larry Harris asks the million-dollar question: Are you a genius, or just lucky? Most people trade because they want to get rich quickly, but few realize that beating the market is one of the hardest things in the world.
The specialist system is one of those things that sounds simple on paper but gets really complicated in practice. And controversial. Very controversial.
Chapter 10 is where Harris gets into one of the most important ideas in the entire book: how certain traders actually make prices accurate. Not because they want to help society. They just want to make money. The price accuracy is a side effect.
Index trading is one of the most important financial innovations of the twentieth century. And after reading Chapter 22 about how hard it is to identify skilled managers, you can understand why.
In Chapter 21, Larry Harris explains that the commission you pay your broker is only a tiny part of your total cost. For active or large traders, the Implicit Costs are where the real damage happens.
Chapter 9 is one of those chapters you might be tempted to skip because it sounds theoretical. “Good Markets.” Sounds like an econ textbook subtitle. But Harris actually makes a case here that affects literally everyone, not just traders.
Book: Financial Markets and Institutions, 11th Edition Author: Jeff Madura Publisher: Cengage Learning, 2015 Series: Chapter 12 Review
Most people think buying a stock is simple. You click a button and it happens. Chapter 12 pulls back the curtain on what actually goes on between that click and the execution. It covers order types, margin trading, short selling, the role of market makers, electronic trading, and the regulations that try to keep everything fair.
In Part 1, we saw that statistical tests need 20+ years of data to reliably separate skilled managers from lucky ones. But the problems run even deeper. This section of Chapter 22 covers the traps that make performance evaluation even less reliable than the basic statistics suggest, and what actually works for predicting who will trade well.
In Chapter 20, Larry Harris tackles Volatility. Most people see volatility as “risk” or “scary price swings,” but Harris breaks it down into two very different components.
In Part 1 we covered the “normal” reasons people trade: investing, borrowing, exchanging assets, hedging. Those are utilitarian traders who use markets to solve real-world problems. Now we get to the uncomfortable half. Gamblers, speculators, fools, and everyone in between.
Here’s a question that keeps coming up in investing: how do you know if a fund manager is actually good, or just lucky?
In Chapter 19, Larry Harris breaks down the most overused word in finance: Liquidity. Everyone wants it, but very few people can define it.
Chapter 8 opens Part II of the book, and it asks one of those questions that sounds obvious until you actually try to answer it: why do people trade?
You cannot manage what you cannot measure. Harris opens Chapter 21 with this principle and then spends the rest of the chapter explaining just how hard it is to measure transaction costs properly. The basic idea is simple: compare what you paid to some benchmark price. But the choice of benchmark determines everything, and every benchmark has flaws.
In Chapter 18, we look at the world from the perspective of the Buy-Side Traders—the mutual funds, pension funds, and insurance companies that actually own the capital. For these players, every trade is a tactical battle over Order Exposure.
In Part 1 we covered what brokers do, different broker types, and how they make money. Now we get to the uncomfortable part: what happens when your broker does not have your best interests in mind.
In the second half of Chapter 17, Larry Harris explains why being an arbitrageur isn’t just about finding a “money machine.” It’s a risky business that requires massive capital and perfect timing.
You open Robinhood, tap “Buy,” and 0.3 seconds later you own shares of Apple. Simple, right? But between your thumb tap and that trade actually happening, there is a whole chain of people and systems doing work for you. Chapter 7 is about those people. Brokers.
Volatility is one of those words that everyone uses but most people think about too simply. Prices went up and down a lot today? Volatile. VIX is high? Volatile. Your crypto portfolio lost 40%? Very volatile.
Everyone talks about liquidity. Traders talk about it. Regulators talk about it. Financial journalists definitely talk about it. But Harris makes a sharp observation right at the start of Chapter 19: rarely does anyone define what they actually mean. People use the same word to describe different things, and then they wonder why they cannot agree on anything.
In Chapter 17, we meet the Arbitrageurs. These are the traders who make sure the world makes sense. If gold is $2,000 in New York and $1,990 in London, the arbitrageur buys in London and sells in New York until the prices match. They are the “price harmonizers.”
Chapter 6 is where Harris explains the actual machinery that matches buyers with sellers. If you ever wondered what happens between the moment you hit “buy” and the moment your order fills, this is the chapter.
If you are a retail trader, you tap “buy” on your phone and your order fills in milliseconds. Easy. But if you manage a pension fund and need to buy 500,000 shares of something? That is an entirely different problem. Chapter 18 is about the people who solve it.
In Chapter 16, Larry Harris introduces us to the Value Traders. While dealers provide “immediacy” for small orders, value traders provide “depth” for the massive moves. They are the market’s ultimate safety net.
In Part 1 we covered trading sessions and the main execution systems: quote-driven dealer markets and order-driven markets. Now let’s get into brokered markets, hybrid structures, crossing networks, and the information plumbing that holds everything together.
Last time we covered what arbitrageurs are and why they matter. But here is the thing: knowing that arbitrage exists is very different from understanding how hard it actually is to pull off. This second half of Chapter 17 gets into the specific strategies, the risks, and the spectacular ways arbitrage can go wrong.
In Chapter 15, Larry Harris takes us away from the public exchange and into the “Upstairs Market.” If you want to buy 500,000 shares of a stock, you don’t just dump a market order into your app—you’d move the price 10% against yourself before the order was half-finished.
Chapter 5 is where Harris gets into the actual plumbing. You know how in previous chapters we talked about types of traders and types of orders? Now we are looking at the arena where all that happens. Market structure. The rules, the systems, and the “who gets to trade with whom” part.
Book: Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners Author: Larry Harris Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN: 0-19-514470-8
In the second half of Chapter 14, Larry Harris gives us the “cheat sheet” for predicting how wide a bid/ask spread will be. If you’re building a trading system or managing a portfolio, these are the variables that determine your “slippage.”
Every time you tap “buy” in your brokerage app, you are sending an order. But most people have no idea there are many different kinds of orders, and each one has very different consequences for your wallet. Chapter 4 is basically a field guide to all of them.
In Chapter 14, we look at the Bid/Ask Spread. This is the most important number in trading because it’s the price you pay for Immediacy. If you want to trade right now, you pay the spread. If you’re willing to wait, you try to earn the spread.
In Part 1 we covered the players: buy side, sell side, brokers, dealers. Now Harris walks us through what they actually trade, where they trade it, and who makes sure nobody burns the whole thing down.
Book: Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners Author: Larry Harris Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN: 0-19-514470-8
Book: Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners Author: Larry Harris Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN: 0-19-514470-8
In Chapter 13, we meet the Dealers. Larry Harris compares them to any other merchant—like a car dealer or a grocer. They buy inventory at a low price (the Bid) and sell it at a high price (the Ask). Their product isn’t the stock itself; it’s Immediacy. They are selling you the ability to trade right now.
Chapter 3 is a guided tour of the entire trading industry. Harris warns upfront it’s packed with jargon. He also says you can skip it if you already know this stuff. But if you’re new to how markets work, this chapter is the map you need before going deeper.
Book: Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners Author: Larry Harris Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN: 0-19-514470-8
In Chapter 12, Larry Harris introduces us to the Bluffers. If the Informed Traders are the data scientists, the Bluffers are the illusionists. They don’t have any real information; they just want you to think they do.
Before getting into theory, Harris tells stories. Chapter 2 walks you through real trading scenarios, from a regular person buying stock to a soybean processor hedging in the futures pit. Each story shows a different corner of the market.
Book: Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners Author: Larry Harris Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN: 0-19-514470-8
In Chapter 11, Larry Harris introduces us to Order Anticipators. These are parasitic speculators. They don’t care about what a stock is worth, and they don’t provide liquidity. They just want to know what you are about to do so they can do it first.
Chapter 1 is where Harris lays out what this whole book is about. And honestly, even this intro chapter packs more useful information than most entire YouTube courses on “how to trade.”
If Chapter 11 was about the parasites who trade ahead of you, Chapter 12 is about the con artists who trick you into trading badly. Bluffers are profit-motivated traders who create false impressions to fool other traders. And Harris walks through their playbook in detail that is genuinely uncomfortable.
In the second half of Chapter 10, Larry Harris explores the economics of being “smart.” If you’re an informed trader, your life is a constant battle against competition and the paradox of your own success.
So I just finished reading “Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners” by Larry Harris. And I have thoughts.
This is one of those books that’s been sitting on finance reading lists for years. Published in 2003 by Oxford University Press (ISBN: 0-19-514470-8), it’s basically the textbook on how markets actually work. Not the “buy low sell high” stuff you see on social media. The real mechanics. How orders flow, why spreads exist, what dealers actually do, and why some traders consistently lose money to others.
Chapter 11 is about the market’s parasites. Not informed traders who make prices more accurate. Not dealers who provide liquidity. These are the order anticipators: traders who profit by getting in front of other people’s trades. They do not improve anything. They just take.
If the market is a giant statistical calculator (as Larry Harris calls it), then Informed Traders are the data scientists providing the inputs. In Chapter 10, we look at the people who actually do the work to figure out what things are worth.
Chapter 10 is about the most important thing markets do: make prices reflect reality. And it is about the people who make that happen. Informed traders.
In Chapter 9, Larry Harris steps back from the “how” of trading to look at the “why.” Why should a regular person, who might not even own a single stock, care about whether the New York Stock Exchange has a central limit order book or how fast orders are linked?
In the second half of Chapter 8, we meet the players who are actually trying to make a living in the arena. If trading is a zero-sum game, these are the people trying to take your money.
What does “good” even mean when we talk about a market? This is not a philosophical question. It is a practical one that affects every regulation, every rule change, and every debate about how trading should work. Chapter 9 is Harris building a framework for answering this question, and it turns out to be one of the most important chapters in the book.
Book: Systematic Fixed Income: An Investor’s Guide Author: Scott A. Richardson, Ph.D. Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, 2022 ISBN: 9781119900139
In Chapter 8, Larry Harris drops a truth bomb: Trading is a zero-sum game. For every winner, there is a loser. If you want to make money, you have to trade with someone who is going to lose.
Here is a question that sounds simple but almost nobody answers honestly: why do you trade?
Not “to make money.” That is what everyone says. Harris dedicates Chapter 8 to pulling apart all the different reasons people actually show up to the market. And the taxonomy he builds is genuinely useful. Because if you do not understand why you trade, you are probably doing it wrong. And if you cannot figure out why the person on the other side of your trade is trading, you have no idea whether you are the smart money or the dumb money.
Most brokers are honest. But the relationship between broker and client has a built-in conflict that can’t be fully eliminated. The second half of Chapter 7 in “Trading and Exchanges” covers this conflict, the ways dishonest brokers exploit it, and the systems markets have built to keep everyone (mostly) honest.
In the second half of Chapter 7, Larry Harris gets into the messy reality of the Principal-Agent Problem. You are the principal (the boss), and the broker is the agent. In a perfect world, they do exactly what you want. In the real world, they have their own bills to pay.
Brokers are the middlemen of trading. You might think of them as a necessary evil, but Larry Harris makes a compelling case in Chapter 7 of “Trading and Exchanges” that they provide services most traders simply cannot replicate on their own. Understanding what brokers do, and what they might do to you, is essential whether you’re a retail trader or managing billions.
If you aren’t trading for your own account on the floor, you’re using a broker. In Chapter 7, Larry Harris explains that brokers are more than just order-takers—they are the grease that keeps the wheels of the market turning.
Order-driven markets are where most of the action happens. Almost every major exchange in the world is order-driven. If you understand how these markets match buyers to sellers and price the resulting trades, you understand the mechanics of modern trading. Chapter 6 of “Trading and Exchanges” breaks it all down.
In Chapter 6, we get into the “code” of the market. Order-driven markets don’t rely on a dealer to set prices; they rely on a set of rules. If you’re a developer building an exchange, these are your requirements.
Not all markets work the same way. The rules, the systems, and the structure of a market determine who can trade, what information they can see, and who actually makes money. Chapter 5 of “Trading and Exchanges” lays out a framework for understanding market structures. And once you understand this framework, you can look at any market in the world and quickly figure out how it works.
In Chapter 5, Larry Harris explains that the market structure—the rules and the tech—is just as important as the orders themselves. It determines who has the power and who gets the profit.
Every trade starts with an order. And if you don’t understand orders, you’re basically showing up to a poker game without knowing the rules. Chapter 4 of Larry Harris’s “Trading and Exchanges” is all about orders, what they are, and the properties that make each type useful (or dangerous) in different situations.
If you can’t personally stand on the exchange floor and shout your trades, you need orders. In Chapter 4, Larry Harris breaks down the different types of instructions you can give your broker and why the specific type you choose is the biggest factor in your success.
In the second half of Chapter 3, Larry Harris dives into the different types of markets and the rules that keep them from turning into the Wild West.
This is Part 2 of our coverage of Chapter 3 in Trading and Exchanges. Part 1 covered the players, trade facilitators, and instruments. Now we get into where trading actually happens and who makes the rules.
In Chapter 3, Larry Harris zooms out to give us the “big picture” of the trading industry. If you want to understand market microstructure, you first need to know who the players are and what they’re actually trading.
Chapter 3 of Trading and Exchanges is the chapter where Larry Harris dumps the entire trading industry on your desk and says, “Here is how it all fits together.” It is dense with jargon and institutional detail. Harris even admits you can skip it if you already know the industry. But for everyone else, this chapter provides the context that makes everything after it make sense.
Chapter 2 of Trading and Exchanges is basically Larry Harris saying: “Let me show you what actually happens when someone trades.” And it is one of the most eye-opening chapters in the book, especially if you have only ever traded through an app where you tap “buy” and shares magically appear in your account.
In Chapter 1, we talked about the theory. In Chapter 2, Larry Harris gives us four stories to show how these concepts work in the wild. If you’ve ever wondered what happens behind the scenes of a “Buy” button, this is for you.
If you’ve ever wondered why prices move the way they do, or why some people seem to always make money while others lose, you’re looking for market microstructure.
Larry Harris opens Trading and Exchanges with a simple observation: markets are fascinating. They change constantly as prices adjust to new information, as winning traders replace losing traders, and as new technologies evolve. That is a pretty understated way to describe the most complex competitive arena in the world.
So you want to understand how markets actually work. Not the “buy low, sell high” platitude your uncle repeats at Thanksgiving. Not the Reddit version where everything is either a short squeeze or a conspiracy. The real mechanics. How orders get filled, why prices move, who makes money, and who gets eaten alive.
Have you ever wondered what actually happens when you click “buy” on your trading app? Most people think about the stock price or the company’s earnings, but very few understand the actual machinery that makes the trade happen.