Abstract

AbstractStudies of cross‐listings show home markets dominate price discovery and point to informational advantages of local investors. However, we show price discovery gravitates to markets with better order execution quality and find home markets do not dominate price discovery. Instead, price discovery is more evenly split, especially for emerging markets. Order execution quality determines the dominant market as price discovery shifts 22% when order execution advantages reverse between home and foreign markets. Thus, markets with poor execution quality act more as satellite markets, adjust to more liquid markets, and play a diminished role in the pricing of cross‐listed stocks.

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