1 / 8

Chapter 11 Order Anticipators

Chapter 11 Order Anticipators. Order Anticipators. Front runners, Sentiment-oriented technical traders, Squeezers, Manipulation of stop orders They do not make prices more informative or markets more liquid. Tick size is important. They are all parasitic traders. Front Runners.

eytan
Download Presentation

Chapter 11 Order Anticipators

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 11 Order Anticipators

  2. Order Anticipators • Front runners, Sentiment-oriented technical traders, Squeezers, Manipulation of stop orders • They do not make prices more informative or markets more liquid. • Tick size is important. • They are all parasitic traders.

  3. Front Runners • Front running aggressive traders • Profit from the price impact of aggressive traders. Discuss example. • Illegal when they violate a confidential brokerage relationship. • Front running passive traders • Quote matching or penny jumping. Discuss example. • Extract option values of the standing orders.

  4. Front Running and Market Efficiency • Make prices less informative when they front run uninformed traders. • Make prices more informative when they front run informed traders. • Long-run effect of informed traders may be to make market prices less informative! • Why? Because traders invest less in information due to smaller profits.

  5. Front Running and Liquidity • Front runners make markets less liquid. • They benefit the traders with whom they trade when they improve prices to step in front of other traders. • They do so at the expense of the traders they front run. (Extracting option values) • Some traders become less aggressive when confronted with front runners.

  6. Sentiment-Oriented Technical Traders • They try to predict the trades that uninformed traders will decide to make. • They profit from the price impact of uninformed trades. • Their trading make market prices less informative because they try to trade before uninformed traders. • They make markets less liquid.

  7. Squeezers • They try to monopolize one side of a market so that anyone who must liquidate a position on the other side must trade with them. • Make prices less informative. • Illegal in the US.

  8. Manipulation of Stop Orders • “Gunning the market” • Push prices up or down to activate stop orders. • Stop orders then accelerate those price changes. • They close their positions at a profit by trading with the stop orders! Use example. • Illegal in the US. But almost impossible to enforce.

More Related