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by kasey_junk 3792 days ago
First, let me make it clear, I don't view market participants competing on time as a problem and physics means it will always be a component of the price of the risk associated with trading. But if we are going to be making changes to markets, I'd much rather change the pricing requirements than adding esoteric random time differences, or assuming batch auctions will make things better.

The reason I like reducing tick sizes (and I mean dramatically like 1/1000th or more) is less about the bid ask spread at the middle, but rather the competition at the +1 levels. A lot of the latency advantage right now is in being able to cancel a few levels near the midpoint while leaving tons of other orders stacked.

Reducing tick sizes would make these deep stacking strategies less viable, which seems (though I have no proof) like it would make the positions of the market makers less risky in a systematic way.

As for GOOG vs MSFT, I think that is obviously explained by the much higher price of GOOG right? Nothing is going to make holding a stock that costs more less risky, even speed.

1 comments

I thought you were making the argument that reducing tick sizes would reduce the amount of effort put into reducing latency (or reducing the overall amount of prop HFT volume), but I guess I was wrong about that. The idea that reducing tick sizes would ultimately reduce market maker risk by making certain quoting strategies less viable is interesting.
I think ultimately I'm just not being clear about something I'm not certain of in any case, but a better restatement of my position might be:

"Having some participants whose primary competitive edge is speed is not in and of itself bad, but speed advantages tend to consolidate around a few natural monopolies, which is. So if we could add something else into the mix that allows for other participants to compete outside of those monopolies, that is good. Dramatically reduced tick sizes would do that, would at times make the spreads smaller, and might even make market making less risky systematically and doesn't seem to have the downsides of other options proposed".

Do you think there are monopolies in electronic market making? I think there are tons of firms out there trying to be good at it in different asset classes, and a few that are really good at it in lots of asset classes. I'm not sure it looks like "a few natural monopolies."
I don't know if we are there yet, but it certainly seems to be trending towards consolidation. I don't have any data to back that up, just my impression from around town.

Of course that could have been due to macro trends around volatility that have reversed recently as well, I suppose.