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by idohft
4403 days ago
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I can't reply to that thread (maybe it's because it was too long ago), but you draw a difference between someone moving a large block (as described in yummyfajitas' post), and someone trading a small size (50 shares). So let's say that someone does want to trade 50 shares, in your example, and breaks up their order into 2 25-share orders. At the point at which a 25-share order is executed on the market, the sheer size of the trade is not very much. It's not likely to signify a market move. At that time, nobody has knowledge that there is a second 25-share order heading to the second market. It is possible that an HFT player sees the first execution and takes out the shares at the second market, but with such a small execution, they are pretty much guaranteed to lose money. |
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(1) Someone wants to move a block of 50 shares, but there are only matching orders in the order book for 25 of those 50 shares. The seller splits his order so that the 25 shares move; then either the other 25 sit there until a matching order appears, or the seller changes his offer price for the other 25 shares so that there's a match.
An HFT in this scenario is no different from any other investor deciding whether or not to match an order in the order book; he just moves faster. And since in this scenario there are no other matching orders in the order book without the HFT, the HFT adds liquidity in this scenario.
(2) Someone wants to move a block of 50 shares. There is no matching order in the order computer in which they place their sell order, but there are matching orders in other computers. The HFT sees those other matching orders before other market players, and matches them. Then he places his own order in the computer where the original 50-share sell order is, and matches it so it executes.
In this scenario, the HFT adds no liquidity; all he does is shift the profit on the trade from other market players to himself, by taking advantage of the latency between different computers on which orders are placed. The trade would have happened anyway once the two computers reconciled their orders.