By John Melloy: A single mysterious computer program that
placed orders — and then subsequently canceled them — made up 4 percent
of all quote traffic in the U.S. stock market last week, according to
the top tracker of high-frequency trading activity. The motive of the algorithm is still unclear.
The
program placed orders in 25-millisecond bursts involving about 500
stocks, according to Nanex, a market data firm. The algorithm never
executed a single trade, and it abruptly ended at about 10:30 a.m. ET
Friday.
“Just goes to show you how just one person can have such an outsized impact on the market,” said Eric Hunsader, head of Nanex and the No. 1 detector of trading anomalies watching Wall Street today. “Exchanges are just not monitoring it.”
Hunsader’s
sonar picked up that this was a single high-frequency trader after
seeing the program’s pattern (200 fake quotes, then 400, then 1,000)
repeated over and over. Also, it was being routed from the same place,
the Nasdaq [COMP
3067.56
-44.79
(-1.44%)
].
“My
guess is that the algo was testing the market, as high-frequency
frequently does,” says Jon Najarian, co-founder of TradeMonster.com. “As
soon as they add bandwidth, the HFT crowd sees how quickly they can top
out to create latency.” (Read More: Unclear What Caused Kraft Spike: Nanex Founder.)
Translation:
The ultimate goal of many of these programs is to gum up the system so
it slows down the quote feed to others and allows the computer traders
(with their co-located servers at the exchanges) to gain a money-making
arbitrage opportunity.
The scariest part of this single program was
that its millions of quotes accounted for 10 percent of the bandwidth
that is allowed for trading on any given day, according to Nanex. (The
size of the bandwidth pipe is determined by a group made up of the
exchanges called the Consolidated Quote System.) (Read More: Cuban, Cooperman: Curb High-Frequency Trading.)
“This
is pretty out there to see this affect this many stocks at the same
time,” said Hunsader, adding that high-frequency traders are doing
anything to “tip the odds in their favor.”
A
Senate panel at the end of September sought answers on high-frequency
trading, as investigators look into the best way to stop
wealth-destroying events such as the Knight Capital Group [KCG
2.51
-0.04
(-1.57%)
] computer glitch in August and the market “flash crash” two years ago. (Read More: Ex-Insider Calls High-Frequency Trading ‘Cheating’.)
Regulators
are trying to see how they can rein in the practice, which accounts for
70 percent of trading each day, without slowing down progress and
profits for Wall Street and the U.S. exchanges.
“I feel a tax on order-stuffing is what the
markets need at this point,” said David Greenberg of Greenberg Capital.
“This will cut down on the number of erroneous bids and offers placed
into the market at any given time and should help stabilize the trading
environment.”
Hunsader
warned that regulators better do something fast, speculating that this
single program could have led to something very bad if big news broke,
or if a sell-off occurred and one entity was hogging this much of the
system.
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