Abstract
High-speed market connections improve investors' ability to search for attractive quotes in fragmented markets, raising gains from trade. They also enable fast traders to observe market information before slow traders, generating adverse selection, and thus negative externalities. When investing in fast trading technologies, institutions do not internalize these externalities. Accordingly, they overinvest in equilibrium. Completely banning fast trading is dominated by offering two types of markets: one accepting fast traders, the other banning them. However, utilitarian welfare is maximized by having i) a single market type on which fast and slow traders coexist and ii) Pigovian taxes on investment in the fast trading technology.
Keywords
high-frequency trading; externalities; welfare;
JEL codes
- D4: Market Structure and Pricing
- D62: Externalities
- G1: General Financial Markets
- G20: General
- L1: Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance
Replaced by
Bruno Biais, Thierry Foucault, and Sophie Moinas, “Equilibrium Fast Trading”, Journal of Financial Economics, vol. 116, n. 2, May 2015, pp. 292–313.
Reference
Bruno Biais, Thierry Foucault, and Sophie Moinas, “Equilibrium Fast Trading”, TSE Working Paper, n. 13-387, March 2013, revised September 2014.
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 13-387, March 2013, revised September 2014