High frequency trading uses computers, rather than people, to generate buy and sell orders on markets such as Chi - X and the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX).
Not exact matches
A sharp price move coupled with
high volume often prompts speculation about the influence of
high frequency trading, when computer algorithms are
used to
trade stocks at an extremely rapid pace.
High - frequency traders, using powerful computers to trade at exceptionally high speeds, now account for up to 60 percent of daily turno
High -
frequency traders,
using powerful computers to
trade at exceptionally
high speeds, now account for up to 60 percent of daily turno
high speeds, now account for up to 60 percent of daily turnover.
This fragmentation was accompanied and encouraged by the rise of
high -
frequency trading, a term that describes the
use of
high - powered computer programs to make hundreds or thousands of
trades per minute in an attempt to exploit miniscule inefficiencies in the markets.
It basically takes advantages of pre-programmed algorithms in order to produce optimal results for traders by
using the same principle applied by huge investment banks when they are conducting their
high frequency trades.
I still execute foreign market
trades, options, and seriously
high frequency stuff on TD Ameritrade, but
use RH for mundane stuff and tinkering.
This software can range from the simplified versions seen on retail forex platforms, to the highly complex algorithmic quants
used for
high -
frequency trading in institutional setups.
If people stopped
using market orders, much of the advantage of
high frequency trading would go away.
High frequency trading (also known as HFT and «robot
trading») is a type of
trading that
uses very fast computer programs to enter orders and execute
trades on a market.
I describe some of my
trading techniques that I
use to fight back against the
high frequency traders.
A
high frequency trader, Mr. Traumberg starts taking hallucinogenic drugs, which cause him to alter the algorithms he
uses for
trading and begin making «outsider» paintings that examine psychoactive plants.
The expression «A blink of an eye» has so far been
used to convey the shortest possible fraction of time, yet this «obsolete» notion is to be now redefined in relation to phenomena such as the algorithmic interactions in
High -
Frequency Trading.
However, this has not been the approach taken by the EU IPO, or indeed the UK IPO or English
High Court2, which have preferred the multifactorial analysis approach taken in the 2012 CJEU decision of Leno3 where the CJEU stated that «territorial borders of the Member States should be disregarded in the assessment of whether a
trade mark has been put to «genuine
use in the Community»... taking account of all the relevant facts and circumstances, including the characteristics of the market concerned, the nature of the goods or services protected by the
trade mark and the territorial extent and the scale of the
use as well as its
frequency and regularity».