| > They make a ridiculous amount of money doing so. I suppose it depends on how you define ridiculous, but HFTs actually make a surprisingly small amount of money these days. Probably single digit billions across the entire industry (https://quant.stackexchange.com/questions/34856/how-much-pro...), though 2020 was an exceptional year for many firms. > Shouldn't the exchanges have offered the best price, and provided liquidity, in the first place? Either your wording is a little funny, or this question indicates great ignorance about how trading works. Exchanges do not provide liquidity, market makers do. In 2021, "HFT" ~= "market maker". |
I'm a software engineer, interested in crypto, and not that involved in traditional markets (except for holding an S&P 500 index fund).
I do think the exchanges in traditional finance shouldn't have required HFTs in the first place (i.e. it's an antiquated technology). I also think hedge funds and the ultra rich have privileged info, that retail investors don't have.
Anyway, I appreciate the clarification. I like learning about all this.