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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/5322
Title: Effect of network relations on the adoption of electronic trading systems
Authors: Montazemi, Ali Reza
Siam, John J.
Esfahanipour, Akbar
McMaster eBusiness Research Centre (MeRC)
Keywords: Information flow;Alternative trading systems;IT-mediated network ties;Embedded relationships;Arm's-length relationships;Fixed-income market
Publication Date: Jun-2007
Series/Report no.: MeRC working paper
no. 20
Abstract: <p>Information systems can serve as intermediaries between the buyers and the sellers in a market, creating an "electronic marketplace" that lowers the buyers' cost to acquire information about sellers' prices and product offerings. Although electronic trading systems provide potential to create an efficient market structure, we witness 45 trillion­ dollar fixed-income (FI) market still makes little use of these systems. Low penetration of electronic trading systems in the marketplace is at odds with the existing IT research doctrine. The reason is that the creation of efficient market structure through electronic marketplace is based on macro/eve! interfirm relationships that do not take into account the recurrent microlevel, interpersonal interaction among the market actors. Our empirical investigation, based on face-to-face interviews with 90 fixed­ income senior managers and traders from 2 5 financial institutions, provides a unique insight into the social capital based on social networks of interpersonal relationships in the fixed income market. Our research findings show that the market structure of embedded interpersonal ties enables participants to take advantage of information asymmetry for profit taking. As a result, imposition of electronic trading systems on the present fixed-income market structure is at odds with the present interfirm market norms and business processes enacted for large transactions among market-makers and institutional investors.</p>
Description: <p>41 leaves : ; ;</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/5322
Identifier: merc/19
1018
4943354
Appears in Collections:MeRC (McMaster eBusiness Research Centre) Working Paper Series

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