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by mrchicity
2902 days ago
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That's fair, but the reason isn't entirely due to bias. Few people outside the industry really understand market microstructure. It's a dry and complex subject. Legitimate criticisms are pretty subtle and get lost in the noise of "zomg guys with lasers front running Joe Average's 3 share GOOG trade!" I no longer work in HFT. You can do everything better, smarter, faster than ever, and make less. It is one of the most brutally capitalist businesses: orders on exchanges are a pure undifferentiated commodity. The guy making the smallest spread fastest gets the trade. [1] Nobody cares if it's Virtu or Citadel or three guys in their garage. Think of a business like Wal-Mart's, but if someone finds a way to sell soap a half-cent cheaper, you sell 0 and go out of business. And for the end users of the markets, that's great. Let these guys compete to make tighter markets or arbitrage prices sooner. HFTs play an intermediation role, helping other traders transfer risk immediately to lock in a guaranteed price, rather than waiting for someone else to trade with them. They're basically like CarMax or a grocery store: research what things are worth, buy at wholesale prices, sell at retail prices, and control inventory risk. 1: https://meanderful.blogspot.com/2013/01/hfts-dirty-little-se... |
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