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The Truth About High Frequency Trading

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By Rishi K Narang
September 2009

Keywords: high frequency trading, exchanges, investment strategies, trading technology, liquidity providers, speculators


Rishi NarangThere has been a great deal of fuss this summer about high frequency trading. The complaints range from the idea that HFT creates an unfair system in which some traders can make money by front-running the masses, to the notion that it can be used to manipulate markets and wreak havoc on our financial system. Much of the criticism is rooted in misguided populist rhetoric rather than facts. An objective analysis of HFT might help separate the facts from the vitriol.

High frequency trading benefits the markets because it adds considerable liquidity. For example, in U.S. stock exchanges, HFT participants account for a significant portion of all volumes (50 to 70 percent, according to many experts), which keeps bid-offer spreads a penny wide in most stocks. This benefits every level of market participants — from mom-and-pop investors to pension funds — because narrower spreads mean lower trading costs.

Furthermore, there is nothing preventing anyone from competing in the high frequency space, and there is no special treatment given an HFT operation. To argue that HFT is unfair is like claiming that Warren Buffett should be given a lobotomy because he has better skills and resources at picking stocks. Someone who takes the risk of investing considerable resources and talent into an endeavor that is open to all comers, with no guarantee of success, should not be maligned because he has succeeded. It is also worth noting that HFT is considered extremely valuable to the marketplace by nearly everyone in a position to know, including people running exchanges and mutual funds.

There are two major classes of HFT strategies: those that provide liquidity and those that speculate. Liquidity providers seek to profit by earning the bid-offer spread and the liquidity-provision rebates market centers pay (exchanges or Electronic Communication Networks, for example). When they provide liquidity, HFT players are taking the opposite side of other market participants’ trades, and this implies taking risk. This also explains why HFT players depend on lightning-fast executions. They are reacting to other traders’ desires to buy and sell, so they need to know about these events extremely — and process them — quickly in order to produce a timely response.

Additionally, liquidity providers compete with each other for the same orders. Market centers determine which order at a given price gets the first priority, usually based on the time orders were received, so speed matters explicitly in this sense.

Finally, liquidity providers are eager to get rid of the positions they acquire — preferably by providing liquidity on the opposite side — before the market moves too much, and this also necessitates speed.

Some HFT firms are speculators. To the extent that they are trying to profit from short-term movements in various instruments, they need to be able to get into and out of their trades before the move they are expecting to happen has already occurred. For speculators that are also trying to capture the liquidity-provision rebate in the implementation of their strategies, speed matters because they are competing with the market makers.

Let’s now turn to the specific complaints about high frequency trading. Some critics claim that it creates a two-tiered marketplace, where some participants are favored over others. They specifically point to flash trading. And they’re right about flash trading. It allows some orders to be seen by exchange insiders (members) before being visible to others. In theory, this would allow the exchange’s insiders to front-run the order that has been flashed. But flash trading has little to do with HFT. In fact, flash trading predates HFT substantially. Even the name “flash order” comes from the old days when specialists engaged in exactly the kind of front-running made possible with modern flash orders.

Other opponents claim that HFT allows dangerous market manipulations. Earlier this month, news emerged of a Dutch HFT firm that is alleged to be manipulating the crude oil markets. Some in the media are insinuating that such practices may be widespread. But market manipulation is unrelated to HFT. The Hunt Brothers manipulated the silver market in the late ’70s, and Enron manipulated the California electricity market from 2000 to 2001, neither of them using HFT.

Market manipulators usually accumulate large positions in order to affect a manipulation, and this is normally the opposite of the approach of HFT. That such an example exists of a firm manipulating markets using high speed computing is hardly a valid condemnation of HFT generally.

Given all the controversy surrounding high frequency trading, the SEC and other regulatory bodies are “carefully examining” this niche to ferret out any wrongdoing or uneven playing fields. This is good. I only hope that regulators seek facts and objective reality, rather than succumb to the sort of wild fears that bring to mind films like The Terminator or The Matrix. There is no robot revolution looming, and the machines still have off switches.

Rishi K Narang is the Founding Principal and Portfolio Manager of Telesis Capital LLC, which is based in Marina del Rey, CA. Narang has been involved in hedge funds since 1996, with a focus on quantitative hedge funds. He is the author of Inside the Black Box: The Simple Truth About Quantitative Trading (Wiley Finance, 2009), and speaks widely on the subject of quant trading.  For more information about Narang or his book, visit http://www.thequantbook.com.

Comments (5)

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Stock-MD May 24, 2010

May 6th, 2010 proves that this article is a load of self-serving BS. HFT is most definitely not providing any "real" liquidity as they were nowhere to be found when the market needed liquidity. Preditory algos that detect limit prices should be outlawed. The volume of HFT should be reduced somehow to around 10% of the market volume. If liquidity is the purpose then HFT's should only be market makers, no other type should be allowed, and as market makers they should be required to stay in the market and actually provide real liquidity when the market needs it.


hh Dec 30, 2009

franco's comments (nov 24, see below) are ridiculous. HFT models hold positions for seconds. how are they "well designed" if they "drain mom-and-pop investors," who tend to hold positions for months or years at a time? you could, if you were smarter, argue that the benefit of liquidity to the average trader doing the average small-lot trade is insignificant, but to claim that HFT is somehow "out to get" the retail trader is just dumb. and in paragraph 3, the article is making the analogy that there are barriers to entry to being like warren buffett too...being smart is one, but being as big and experienced as his shop is another. do you think the average investor gets to see the kinds of deals that buffett does? nope. do you think that's unfair? apparently not. there are innumerable things that people without gobs of money can't compete in effectively. f1 racing, hotels, mutual funds, banks, and so on ad infinitum. so what makes high frequency trading different from all these other endeavors in your mind?


Franco Nov 24, 2009

Paragraph two asserts that mom-and-pop investors benefit from narrow bid-offer spreads. This is not necessarily true. A well designed HFT model can systematically drain mom-and-pop by having them overpay and undersell their equity. Mom-and-pop vs Goldman Sachs is no match at all. Paragraph three asserts there is nothing preventing anyone from competing in the HFT space. Sure, so long as you can afford a team of PhD quants, programmers, and some super sweet computer hardware. High fixed costs bars new market participants from entering. Oh, and Warren Buffett is not an HFT guy. He is a fundamentals investor and has always been. I couldn't finish reading your piece beyond this...


Anon Sep 29, 2009

Mark: Is there a reason you would like HFT to be tightly regulated (not talking about "flash" orders here)?


Mark Anderson Sep 15, 2009

High Frequency Trading is something that must be tightly regulated despite what Rishi Narang says. The government needs to be looking into this.