High-frequency traders’ evolving role as market makers
Abstract
The current academic literature on HFTs considers them as the present-day de facto market
makers. We show that HFT trading strategies have moved away from passive market-making
over time. We explore the role of regulatory hurdles in this regard and find that penalties
on high OTR (order-to-trade ratio) negatively affect HFT market-making and result in HFTs
participating in trades as liquidity takers rather than liquidity providers. HFT passive market
making is positively associated with the OTR. We also observe reduced profitability of HFT
market-making strategies over time.
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