While many were underwhelmed by the report, it provides traders with a sense of some of what happened during a day in which the Dow Jones Industrial Average fluctuated some 1138 points.
The chart of the week below shows what happened to IWM, the highly liquid ETF for the Russell 2000 index. IWM trades more than 60 million shares per day and is regularly one of the most active issues traded. Up until 2:43 p.m. ET, IWM was acting normally. Then as the price (dashed line, right scale) began to accelerate downward, liquidity (green and blue bands, left scale) suddenly began to dry up. By 2:46 p.m., market depth (the height of the green and blue bands) in IWM had almost completely disappeared. Over the course of the 74 minutes left in the normal trading session, liquidity began to return slowly to the markets. At the time the markets closed, approximately 60% of the normal market depth from earlier in the day had returned to IWM.
The report linked above has some interesting graphics surrounding trading in ACN, PG, MMM, IBM, AAPL, GE and IWM beginning on page 91 of the PDF. If anything, the action in IWM is the least extreme of the group.
If you have some time, the report is worth at least a scan.
Related posts:
- Some Thoughts on the Seis de Mayo Crash (my moniker did not stick…)
- Volatility and Wide-Range Days with Neutral Closes
- Thinking About Volatility (First in a Series)
- Forces Acting on the VIX
- A Conceptual Framework for Volatility Events
- Availability Bias and Disaster Imprinting
- What My Dog Can Tell Us About Volatility
[source: SEC and CFTC]
Disclosure(s): none