On the behavior of competing markets populated by automated traders
Paper:
On the behavior of competing markets populated by automated traders
Appears:
J. Collins, E. Sklar, O. Shehory, P. Faratin, N. Sadeh, S. Parsons and
J. A. Rodriguez-Aguilar (Editors) Agent-Mediated Electronic
Commerce IX/Trading Agent Analysis and Design, Lecture Notes in
Artificial Intelligence, Springer Verlag, 2008.
Abstract:
Real market institutions, stock and commodity exchanges for example,
do not occur in isolation. Company stock is frequently listed on
several stock exchanges, allowing traders to potentially trade such
stock in different markets. While there has been extensive research
into agent-based trading in individual markets, there is little work
on agents that trade in such multiple market scenarios. Our work seeks
to address this imbalance. Here we provide an initial analysis of the
behavior of trading agents that are free to move between a number of
parallel markets, where markets are able to charge traders in a
variety of ways. We show the movement of traders between markets,
sketch some adaptive strategies that markets may use to adjust
charges, evaluate the effectiveness of these strategies, and give some
results which show the effect of trader movement on properties of the
markets.
Keywords:
Continuous double auction, automated traders, multiple markets
Availability:
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Other information:
This paper is a revision of:
Niu, J., Cai, K. Parsons, S., and Sklar, E. Some preliminary results on
competition between markets for automated traders, in
Proceedings of the Workshop on Trading Agent Design and
Analysis, Vancouver, 2007.
Normally I wouldn't include both as separate publications, but because
the first paper was included in a AAAI Technical Report, we had to
modify the paper for copyright reasons. I took the opportunity to
include some results that weren't in the original paper, so it is
somewhat different.