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| User Info | Problems With Trades Executed at Knight Capital; entered at 2012-08-01 17:47:58 | |||
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Rvacha Posts: 8300 Registered: 2008-10-03 Cleveland
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http://www.zerohedge.com/news/what-happe....Quote:We also all know that one should buy low and sell high. At least that is what human traders are taught, and that is what they attempt. Because if one consistently does the opposite, one will simply run out of money. Well, the opposite is precisely what the berserk algo in Knight's Market Making group may have done if Nanex, which has done a forensic analysis of one of the trades in question, is correct. In other words, instead of at least attempting to provide liquidity via limit trades, Knight's algorithm acted as a market order... gone horribly wrong. As the third chart below shows what the algo did with furious repetition and steadfast consistency was to buy at the offer, and sell at the bid, in other words buy high and sell low. Over and over and over and over. As Nanex laconically notes, "In the case of EXC, that means losing about 15 cents on every pair of trades. Do that 40 times a second, 2400 times a minute, and you now have a system that's very efficient at burning money." Which also means that by not DK'ing several hundred million prints, the NYSE may have just thrown Knight under the bus, because the market maker is suddenly on the hook for tens if not hundreds of millions in inverse market making profits. Charts from Nanex at the link. I think ZH is correct in thinking that NYSE only canceled trades in some symbols because they knew this would leave Knight with huge and rightfully deserved losses Last modified: 2012-08-01 17:49:33 by rvacha
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