HFT is Dead. Long Live HFT.

The FT has just published an interestingpiece titledHow High Frequency Trading Hit A Speed Bump. While the main point of the piece was to highlight a new high speed transatlantic route known as Go West, the piece feels more like a HFT post-mortem. Comments from HFT folks about how profits have decreased due to higherdata costs and lower volatility are frequent in the piece. The FT also published the below graph from theTabb Groupabout decreasing HFT profits:

hftprofit

Thecommoditization of speed is also another main point in the piece. One HFT executive is quoted as sayingWe dont necessarily value absolute speed as much as relative speed.The article implies that speed is no longer the determining factor in HFT.

Average readers may come away from reading this piece and think that HFT is dead but regular readers of the Themis Trading blog know that this is not true. In fact, our friends at IEX just published a piece titledIncentivizing Trading Behavior Through Market Designwhich takes a very close look at the speed games that are still going on in the equity market.

IEX breaks down variousproprietary trading strategies and notes that there are some beneficial market making strategies, but there are also HFT strategies which are still harmful to the market. Two of these harmful strategies are Structural Arbitrage (aka Latency Arbitrage) and Order Detection:

iexchart

IEX notes that thesestrategies are currently legal and IEX doesnt think that is the problem. Rather, they blame our conflicted market structure for giving these traders the tools to execute their harmful behavior. According to IEX:

Our position is that it would be impractical and ill-advised for regulators to attempt to outlaw even the trading strategies that we consider to be net harmful. We live in a capitalist society, and the typical operators of these strategies are not customer-facing and thus have no fiduciary obligations. We believe there are conflicts of interest in the markets that sometimes enhance these opportunities, and those conflicts should be eliminated.

IEX particularly singles out their exchange competitors as the source of the problem:

Unfortunately, there is not much a broker can do to avoid structural arbitrage, as these opportunities exist within the fabric of stock trading infrastructure.We believe that only the exchange operators are in a position to realistically make a dent in preventing these scenarios, although they are by no means typically economically incentivized to do so.

We agree with IEX and believe that the recent US Court of Appeals ruling in theCity of Providence, et al. v. BATS Global Markets, Inc.case could possibly convince the exchanges that they need to change their practices. The court ruled thatexchanges arenot entitled to absoluteimmunitywhich opens the door for numerous class action lawsuits filed by investorsagainst theexchangesto proceed andcould result in millions of dollars in damages against thestock exchanges.

While IEXs speed bump and order types like D-Peg have helped non-displayed liquidity providers avoid some of the harmful HFT strategies, they admit that up until now they really havent had a way to help displayed liquidity providers. However, they are about to roll out a new fee which would essentially target the HFTs that seek to pick off stale displayed quotes:

We have decided-rather than paying a rebate to directly incentivize displayed orders-to charge a narrowly-tailored feeto disincentivize opportunistic order flow that picks off displayed orders. Our goal is to reduce the incidence of this net-harmful order flow, in turn further improving the experience of displayed liquidity adders on IEX.

Based on their own proprietary data, IEX shows that HFTs are still trying hard to pick off slower traders. According to IEX,only14% of agency broker orderflow arrives after IEX observesa crumbling quote. By contrast,83% of aggressive orders received from proprietary trading firmsoccur during the observation of a crumbling quote. In other words, HFTs are still involved in the speed race and sometimes even race to pick off their market maker brethren.While it may be more expensive and more competitive today for HFTto pick off the slow traders, make no mistake, they have not gone away.

HFT is dead. Long live HFT.