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Showing 141 to 150 of 2127 search results for occasional papers.
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Occasional Paper No. 51: Using online experiments for behaviourally informed consumer policy
Consumer policy is informed by human behaviour but how do we measure this in a cost effective and relevant way? Online experiments help us focus our policy making decisions to act in consumers interests. -
New analysis offers mixed picture on high frequency trading in the UK
New analysis offers mixed picture on high frequency trading in the UK. Insight First published:. 11/04/2016. Last updated: 17/02/2017. New analysis offers mixed picture on high frequency trading in the UK. High Frequency Traders have come under -
Occasional Paper No. 60: Banning Dark Pools: Venue Selection and Investor Trading Costs
This paper shows that investors can reduce their execution costs by selecting venues with less pre-trade transparency, such as dark pools or venues with similar characteristics. -
Occasional Paper No. 59: Sitting on a gold mine: Getting what’s owed to pawnbroking customers
In 2018, the FCA found that pawnbroking customers are not always collecting the ‘surplus’ money owed to them. In this paper, we share the results of a first intervention designed to address this. -
Occasional Paper No. 50: Quantifying the High-Frequency Trading 'Arms Race': A new methodology and estimates
Occasional Paper 50 -
Occasional Paper No. 42: Increasing credit card payments using choice architecture: The case of anchors and prompts
In this paper we investigate ways to encourage consumers to repay more of their credit card debt. -
Occasional Paper 22: Price discrimination and cross-subsidy in financial services [pdf]
This paper sets out the key economic principles on price discrimination and cross-subsidy. -
Occasional Paper No. 45: The semblance of success in nudging consumers to pay down credit card debt
In this study we study consumer responses to a randomised field experiment on credit card debt repayment. -
Occasional Paper No. 32: Now you see it: drawing attention to charges in the asset management industry
As part of the Asset Management Market Study, the FCA wanted to understand the impact of different ways of presenting charges on investors’ decision-making and their understanding and awareness of charges. -
Occasional Paper No. 29: Aggregate market quality implications of dark trading [pdf]
In this paper, we examine the impact of dark trading on aggregate market quality in the UK.