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senegal, page-17

  1. 498 Posts.
    Yes, you have to be a broker if a normal trader tried to use a bot they would be thrown in Jail. Bit of an unfair advantage to the brokers keeping the price down for their clients. You never stand a chance against the bot. Good to know about this type of trading as it effects a large portion of all trades in todays market.

    Algorithmic trading

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


    In electronic financial markets, algorithmic trading or automated trading, also known as algo trading, black-box trading or robo trading, is the use of computer programs for entering trading orders with the computer algorithm deciding on aspects of the order such as the timing, price, or quantity of the order, or in many cases initiating the order without human intervention. Algorithmic Trading is widely used by pension funds, mutual funds, and other buy side (investor driven) institutional traders, to divide large trades into several smaller trades in order to manage market impact, and risk.[1][2] Sell side traders, such as market makers and some hedge funds, provide liquidity to the market, generating and executing orders automatically. In this "high frequency trading" computers make the decision to initiate orders based on information that is received electronically, before human traders are even aware of the information.
    Algorithmic trading may be used in any investment strategy, including market making, inter-market spreading, arbitrage, or pure speculation (including trend following). The investment decision and implementation may be augmented at any stage with algorithmic support or may operate completely automatically ("on auto-pilot").

    A third of all EU and US stock trades in 2006 were driven by automatic programs, or algorithms, according to Boston-based consulting firm Aite Group LLC.[3] As of 2009, high frequency trading firms account for 73% of all US equity trading volume.[4]

    In 2006 at the London Stock Exchange, over 40% of all orders were entered by algo traders, with 60% predicted for 2007. American markets and equity markets generally have a higher proportion of algo trades than other markets, and estimates for 2008 range as high as an 80% proportion in some markets. Foreign exchange markets also have active algo trading (about 25% of orders in 2006).[5] Futures and options markets are considered to be fairly easily integrated into algorithmic trading,[6] with about 20% of options volume expected to be computer generated by 2010.[7] Bond markets are moving toward more access to algorithmic traders.[8]
 
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