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1) It's debatable whether you can call this behaviour "abuse". It's also debatable whether you can call it "front-running". The HFT has an advantage over the rest of the market, which is that they're faster. They're faster because they've paid for faster connections and they've hired expensive developers to build fast software. They then use that advantage to propagate information between exchanges more rapidly, so that they don't get picked off by informed traders on other exchanges. The basic mechanism is exactly the same as any other market making, it's just that it happens faster. Let's say I'm a big investor in 1960 who wants to buy 100,000 shares of MSFT (yeah, they didn't exist back then, whatever). I call up a floor broker who's standing on the trading floor at NYSE and he quotes me $49-$51 (because it's 1960 and you can drive a bus through the spread) but he can only offer me 50,000 shares. No problem, I buy from him at $51 and dial another broker at BATS in Kansas (also didn't exist in 1960) to get a quote from him too. But in the time it takes me to dial the number, the news of my trade is wired from NY to Kansas and my broker there has put his prices up in response - he now quotes me $49.50-$51.50. What the hell? I thought it was $51 to buy? Well, it was at the time I made my first trade. But when you want to make a big trade, you don't get it all at the bbo. You expect your trade to move the market. Exactly the same thing happens today, except that it all happens in milliseconds rather than minutes, and the spread is $0.01 instead of $2. Voice traders at banks and other big institutions (at least, the ones that didn't already adapt years ago) are getting hissy about it because they want to be able to buy everything at the prices they can see on the screen, regardless of liquidity considerations, and also they'd like a pony thank you very much. 2) 'Regular people' are not putting in orders that are large enough that they need to be routed to multiple exchanges. If I send an order for 100 shares of MSFT, it won't go anywhere near an exchange. It will get filled immediately, by my broker, at essentially the national bbo. 3) Yup, it's totally valid to ask these questions. In fact I think it would be great if the HFT industry was more transparent, and I fully expect that to happen. But that's not the same as saying that the market is rigged or labeling totally standard market-making behaviour as "abuse". |