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trading and discourages banks from venturing into market making, reducing the scope for
price discovery.
Some central banks become dealers, managing their net open foreign exchange
positions to provide liquidity to the market. These central banks absorb innovations in the
order flow at prevailing exchange rates, usually with the intention
of reducing exchange rate
volatility. The exchange rate is still a market-determined rate in the sense that, at that rate,
markets clear, but with the central bank absorbing part of the excess demand or supply. A
few central banks offer two way prices in the market with narrow
spreads that banks cannot
beat and become the main foreign exchange intermediary in the country (Canales-Kriljenko,
2003).
D. Low Market Transparency
The degree of market transparency is an important aspect of the microstructure of
foreign exchange markets.
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Part of the literature on market microstructure
emphasizes the
information sets available to market participants in different types of market structure rather
than the institutional aspects (Lyons, 2001). The degree of transparency is especially
important in
flexible exchange rate regimes, where the amount of available information
influences the pricing decisions of foreign exchange intermediaries. Moreover, the
availability of information for pricing and allocation decisions is
a critical determinant of
market efficiency.
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