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High Frequency Trading What Is It & Should I Be Worried?. Presented by Larry Tabb (Founder & CEO). Agenda. What is high frequency trading Who does it Why has high frequency become an issue How does this impact exchanges?. What is high frequency trading?. Wide definition
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High Frequency Trading What Is It & Should I Be Worried? Presented by Larry Tabb (Founder & CEO)
Agenda • What is high frequency trading • Who does it • Why has high frequency become an issue • How does this impact exchanges?
What is high frequency trading? • Wide definition • Firms leveraging high speed market data and analytics to look for temporal supply and demand trading opportunities. These firms typically are self capitalized and hold positions for very short periods of time (typically less than minutes) • Includes • Equity market making • Index arb • Options market making • ETF arb • Stat arb/pairs trading • Narrow and more typically used definition • Equity market making
Who does it? • Typically • Equity market makers • Proprietary trading shops • And a few high frequency hedge funds • Many located in Chicago • This is typically done by self-capitalized firms • This is market-driven and not PM driven • Significant investment in technology infrastructure • Not your standard investment strategy
Who trades? US Equity Share Volume by Market Participant High Frequency Trading accounts for 61% of Share Volume Source: TABB Group Estimate
Retail Hedge Funds Long Only HFT Hedge Funds HFT Broker/ Market Makers Independent HFT The majority of trading is done by professional traders / liquidity providers US Equity Share Volume by Market Participant High Frequency Trading accounts for 61% of Share Volume Liquidity Providers 4% 28 % 29% 3% 7% 13% 16% Investors Investors Liquidity Providers Investment Bank Prop Source: TABB Group Estimate
Goal of HFT - first to spot an opportunity & first to take advantage of it • Co-location • Depending upon the firm, the HFT may need multiple locations • May also want access to dark pools • Sponsored access • Flash trading • Market data • Direct feed • Messaging • Low latency time series • Back testing tools • High speed analytics • CEP (mostly home grown) to locate trends • Execution technology to trade
Electronic Trading Has Caused Steep Decline in Average Trade Size US Equity Share volume and trades Source: TABB Group and Exchange Data
Algos have broken up flow into much smaller executions Shares by Execution Venue (volume weighted) 2 Year CAGR ’07-’09 Source: TABB Group – Institutional Equity Trading in America ’09/’10 – Preliminary
Capital usage is down because of credit crisis and advanced trading technology Percent of Firms Using Capital Directionality of Capital Usage Percent of Firms Paying More For Capital Source: TABB Group – Institutional Equity Trading 2008
Sales trader flow is declining – back to on-trend levels Percentage of Order Flow Firms Sent to Sales Trader 3 Year CAGR -19% ’07-’08 +19% 2 Year CAGR -13% Source: TABB Group – Institutional Equity Trading in America ’09/’10 – Preliminary
In last 23months, exchanges have lost 20% market share to dark pools and ECNs Matched US Equity Flow as a Percentage of Total US Equity Matched Flow NYSE, NASDAQ, & Arca BATS / DirectEdge Crossing / Dark Pools Regional Exchanges Source: TABB Group LiquidityMatrixTM
Market share of liquidity pools are beginning to converge around 13% US Equity Market Share (includes Internalized) Consolidated NYSE/NASDAQ Listed Equities Jul 2008 – Sept 2009 Source: TABB Group LiquidityMatrixTM Exchanges, BATS
Is it worth it? • Benefits • Greater automation • Low fees – exchange competition • Tighter spreads • High certainty of execution • Challenges • Finding the needle in the haystack • Massive quantities of • Data, IT,& Bandwidth • Greater obfuscation • All of this tilts market toward larger brokers • Will benefits remain when only mega-brokers can play? • However Sponsored Access is changing this • Market is becoming more open and accessible (for the technologically advanced)
High Frequency Trading What Is It & Should I Be Worried? Presented by Larry Tabb (Founder & CEO)