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MoneyMarkets & Investing

Asia brokers in balancing act to bypass stalled HFT debate

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Hong Kong Stock Exchange is monitoring the development of new high-tech so-called high-frequency traders (HFTs), along with regulators. Some critics worried that HFTs can “game” conventional traders. Photo: AFP

Brokers in Asia are trying to balance traditional investors and the new force of high-frequency traders to keep profits growing amid a pullback in overall trading volumes, seeking to move past a stalled debate on trading models.

They are also trying to pre-empt regulators as they seek to reconcile the sometimes conflicting interests of two sets of clients -- one of whom measures investment horizons in months and years and the other in nanoseconds.

“As a broker, we’re constantly trying to find ways to pull those two disparate investment communities together,” says Gabriel Butler, Asia head of electronic trading at Morgan Stanley. “That sweet spot is our focus now.”

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That means catering to the high-frequency firms, which offer higher volumes but yield lower margins, without alienating the traditional long-only investor base, which trades less but where margins are fatter.

High-frequency traders (HFTs) are powered by algorithm-driven computer models that instantly analyse trading patterns and can rapidly execute massive orders.

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A big fear for traditional traders is that they are “gamed” by HFTs, including by methods such as bombarding an exchange or ”dark pool” with thousands of quotes in a matter of milliseconds and then cancelling orders after real investors are drawn out.

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