High Frequency Traders and Asset Prices
Preprint
- 11 March 2010
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
Do high frequency traders affect transaction prices? In this paper we derive distributions of transaction prices in limit order markets populated by low frequency traders (humans) before and after the entrance of a high frequency trader (machine). We find that the presence of a machine is likely to change the average transaction price, even in the absence of new information. We also find that in a market with a high frequency trader, the distribution of transaction prices has more mass around the center and thinner far tails. With a machine, mean intertrade duration decreases in proportion to the increase in the ratio of the human order arrival rates with and without the presence of the machine; trading volume goes up by the same rate. We show that the machine makes positive expected profits by "sniping" out human orders somewhat away from the front of the book. This explains the shape of the transaction price density. In fact, we show that in a special case, the faster humans submit and vary their orders, the more profits the machine makes.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Liquidity Shocks and Order Book DynamicsPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2009
- A Stochastic Model for Order Book DynamicsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2008
- High-frequency trading in a limit order bookQuantitative Finance, 2008
- Working Orders in Limit Order Markets and Floor ExchangesThe Journal of Finance, 2007
- Equilibrium in a Dynamic Limit Order MarketThe Journal of Finance, 2005
- Limit Order Book as a Market for LiquidityThe Review of Financial Studies, 2005
- Liquidity-Based Competition for Order FlowThe Review of Financial Studies, 2003
- Competing Mechanisms in a Common Value EnvironmentEconometrica, 2000
- Order flow composition and trading costs in a dynamic limit order marketJournal of Financial Markets, 1999
- Price Dynamics in Limit Order MarketsThe Review of Financial Studies, 1998