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by valkmit
1698 days ago
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Faster transaction times result in tighter spreads, as HFT firms compete each other on the price-time priority queue. HFT firms compete against each other on time, and while yes, that's a zero sum game, the end-result to the broader market is useful. An analogy might be something like Uber and Lyft competing with each other for clients and drivers. From the perspective of everyone else, it doesn't matter much if they ride Uber or they ride Lyft. But the adversarial games that they play against each other [Uber and Lyft] are beneficial to both riders and drivers. Perhaps a duopoly isn't the best example, so you may extrapolate this to any industry where there's a sufficient amount of participants to keep things competitive. |
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