Innovations in Trading and TechnologySponsored by NYSE Technologies
TABB TV Replay: The World After HFT Saturation
07 November 2012:
This week we bring you our top five most-watched videos since the launch of TabbFORUM. Originally published June 30, 2011: NYSE Technologies' Head of Strategy Martin Koopman discusses what happens after "HFT Saturation." This video is related to Paul Rowady's Vision Note - Quantitative Research: The World After High-Speed Saturation. http://www.tabbgroup.com/PublicationDetail.aspx?PublicationID=913
For more videos in the Innovations in Trading and Technology Spotlight Series click here.
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4 Comments to "TABB TV Replay: The World After HFT Saturation":
prowady
01 July 2011
overcoming data management challenges is the key to the whole downstream "multidimensional arbitrage" shebang.
Comments (77)
Anonymous
02 July 2011
You end up with a NYSE ARCA trading €40m a day ?
crammond1964
06 July 2011
the exchanges have put all their monies into data centres ....... volumes and open interest have dropped and the retail investor cannot afford to play ! Hopefully someone brave enough will step up to the mark and admit what a complete disaster HFT has been and attempt to return us to the old market which worked and allowed more then just goldmans and j.p. morgan to play . quite sad really ; remember the board members passed all these laws to change the markets ; dark pools block trades etc .
Comments (251)
BobsUrUncle
24 November 2012
The retail investors are staying away not just because of HFTs (it's just one more dog in the dogpile). The lack of accountability on Wall Street and poor regulation are the main causes. Who was punished after the 2000 crash when analysts pumped up every dogfood internet company, after 2001's telecom meltdown and accounting scandals, after 2007 CDO lead banking disaster and more recently the Flash Crash (more to do with exchange microstructure than HFTs). Send a few bankers, hedge fund managers and traders to jail and maybe the retailers will finally see some justice and once again put their hard earned cash back in the market. But I doubt this will happen anytime soon. Wall Street seems to be hoping that retailers' memories will fade over time. But this time it's different -- demographics indicate that aging retailers don't have any more risk tolerance -- they need the money for retirement (in order to eat).