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More Warnings About High-Frequency Trading

bfwebster writes "From The Big Picture (a great finance/econ blog) comes a link to this New York Times article on some of the risks and problems of high-frequency trading on financial markets and a couple of 'gadflies' who are pushing hard to get some changes and reforms in how Wall Street handles HFT. Key question: when is fast trading too fast?"

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  1. Re:Trading's Too Fast When It Ceases to Mean Anyth by vlm · · Score: 5, Informative

    The root cause behind HFT is

    SEC rule 612

    My advice is if you don't know the rules don't pontificate on the philosophy of the game's rules. You accurately listed several things that suck. I agree with you on your list and your interpretation of your list. Unfortunately your list has very little to do with why HFT exists.

    Of-course the actual solutions aren't even accepted on silly public forums, and they are definitely not going to be accepted by the politicians

    The SEC is controlled by private firms that control politicians, not the other way around. If you really want to destroy HFT, for whatever reasons, the way to do it is to convince trading firms that if you want sub-penny price discovery, you could continue the buildout of your rather baroque and expensive HFT infrastructure, or you could just tell your elected pawns in the govt to tell the SEC to modify rule 612 to force rounding to the nearest dollar or the nearest millionth of a penny.

    If you round to the nearest dollar no one will ever (famous last words) accumulate enough capital to HFT. If you round to the nearest millionth of a penny then millions of dollars of infrastructure will only bring in fractional millionths of a penny times perhaps millions of trades per day or about a thousand bucks a year. Which compared to buying federal bonds at roughly 0 percent or soon to be defaulting muni bonds at -100% is actually not that bad of a return on equity, but anyway...

    Either way the only way for HFT to exist is to set the quantum interval for trading to be "about a penny" which ... tada happens to be right exactly what its set to. I think the way the game's rules are set up precisely perfectly to maximize HFT profits does kinda indicate the people in charge of the market at the big firms want it to be that way, this is not some kind of weird coincidental engineering accident.

    The only real long term effect of destroying HFT would likely be to heavily reduce the transfer of wealth from the FIRE sector to the telecom and IT sector. I'm not sure anyone outside the FIRE sector would benefit by that... I like having the FIRE sector crooks, in a small way, subsidize my IT and telecom service.

    --
    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger