high frequency trading for the flash crash

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The Flash Crash The Impact of High Frequency T rading on Electronic Market Andrei Kirilenko - MIT Sloan School of Management Alber S Kyle - University of Maryland Mehrdad - University of North Carolina Tugkan Tuzum - Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Original Version- October 1, 2010 This Version- May 5, 2014 @Stephan_Chang | [email protected] Financial Economics Course, NCCU #簡報 張博能 | Department of Money and Banking, NCCU

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Page 1: High frequency trading for the flash crash

The Flash CrashThe Impact of High Frequency Trading on Electronic Market

Andrei Kirilenko - MIT Sloan School of Management Alber S Kyle - University of Maryland Mehrdad - University of North Carolina Tugkan Tuzum - Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve

Original Version- October 1, 2010 This Version- May 5, 2014

@Stephan_Chang | [email protected] Financial Economics Course, NCCU

#簡報⼈人 張博能 | Department of Money and Banking, NCCU

Page 2: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Navinder Singh Sarao

A trader in the Nav Sarao Milking Markets - The key person for the Flash Crash, May 6, 2010 - Try to use algorithmic trading to do spoofing trades.

The key person in the Flash Crash

News for today’s topic

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Page 3: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Agent-Based Simulation

News for today’s topic

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Page 4: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Agent-Based Simulation

News for today’s topic

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Page 5: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Agent-Based Simulation

News for today’s topic

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Page 6: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Background

01.

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The Flash Crash - May 6, 2010

▶ Major Equity indices experienced an extraordinary rapid decline and recovery .

▶ Futures and stock market move down and up together.

Page 8: High frequency trading for the flash crash

May 6, 2010, E-mini Contract: Trading Volume and Price

▶ The front-month June 2010 E-mini S&P 500 futures contract sold off from 1127.75 to 1,070.00, (a decline of 57.75 points or 5.1%) during a 13 minute period, between 13:32 and 13:45.

▶ Over the course of the next second, a cascade of executed orders caused the price of the E-mini to drop to 1056.00 or 1.3%.

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Summary Statistics

Page 10: High frequency trading for the flash crash

What did people think ?

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“”

Over reliance on computer systems and high frequency trading

were the primary contributors to the volatility observed on May 6.

High frequency trading is defined by low latency

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How about this paper ?

▶ How did High Frequency Traders and other traders act on May 6, in comparison with previous days?

▶ What may have triggered the Flash Crash?

▶ What role did High Frequency Traders play in Flash Crash?

These researchers try to use audit-trail data for the E-mini S&P 500 stock index futures contract to answer three questions.

Page 13: High frequency trading for the flash crash

The findings in these papers

▶ High Frequency Traders did not cause the Flash Crash. These traders are not the liquidity providers.

▶ On May 6, HFTs traded the same way as they did on May 3-5: Small inventory, high trading volume, take more liquidity than provide.

▶ A large, but short lived imbalance between Fundamental Sellers and Fundamental buyers appeared.

▶ A large trade will always have an serious impact may trigger a cascade.

Page 14: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Literature Review

▶ Brogaard(2010): Argues HFTs increase efficiency

▶ Chaboud, Chiquoine, Hjalmarsson, and Vega (2009): Analyze FX with second-by-second data.

▶ Hendershott, Jones and Menkveld (2010): Liquidity improves as technology speeds up.

▶ Hasbrouck and Saar (2010): Flickering quotes from interactions of HFTs.

▶ Easley, Prado, and O’Hara (2010): VPIN high during flash crash.

Page 15: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Ecosystem

02.

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E-mini S&P 500 Future contract

▶ Traded exclusively on the CME Globex electronic trading platform.

▶ CME Globex trading rules respect price and time priority.

▶ E-mini has the most dollar trading volume among U.S. equity

index products.

▶ Hasbrouck (2003) finds that the E-mini is the largest contributor to price discovery of the S&P 500 index.

▶ Price discovery typically occurs in the “front-month” contract.

Page 17: High frequency trading for the flash crash

CFTC Audit Trail Data▶ Quantity, Price, Trade Direction: Buys and Sells matched consistently.

▶ Date and Time: up to one second.

▶ Match ID: Matches buyer and seller uniquely. Sequences

▶ Account Number, Broker ID, Clearing Firm: Identifies accounts, but firms may control multiple accounts.

▶ Order Type: Limit orders versus market orders.

▶ Aggressiveness Flag: Non-aggressive (resting limit order)

versus aggressive (executable limit order or market order).

▶ CTI Category: Captures agency versus non-agency trading (not used in paper).

Page 18: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Trader Categories

▶ High Frequency Traders (16): High volume, low inventory relative to volume

▶ Intermediaries (179): Low volume, low inventory relative to volume (Market Makers)

▶ Fundamental Buyers (1263): Consistent buyers during day

▶ Fundamental Sellers (1276): Consistent sellers during day

▶ Small Noise Traders (6880): Trade a few contract per day

▶ Opportunistic Trader (5808): Everybody else, including index arbitrage, day traders, miscellaneous speculators (mixed bag).

Page 19: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Trader Categories

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Trader Category Summary Stats

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Analysis

03.

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How did the Flash Crash Occur ?

▶ One account sold 75,000 contracts ($4 billlion, or about 1.5% of May 6 volume).

▶ This was the largest sale by one account from January 1 to May 6, 2010.

▶ This sale occurred precisely during the 20 minute period corresponding to the flash crash and V-shaped rebound.

▶ The buy side of the limit order book was greatly depleted when the sale occurred, due to large price declines previously during the day.

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Net Holding of High Frequency Traders

▶ They do not accumulate of position larger than 4500 contracts.

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Net Holding and Price

Δyt = α + φΔyt�1 + δyy�1 +20�

i=1

�βt�i � Δpt�i/0.25

�+ εt

Where

▶ yt denotes the net holdings of HFTs or Intermediaries at the end of second t.

▶ t = 0 corresponds to 8:30:00

▶ △Pt-i, i = 0, ..., 20 are price changes measured in ticks (0.25 index points).

Page 25: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Inventory Dynamics

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Net Holding and Price (Market Makers)

Δyt = α + φΔyt�1 + δyy�1 +20�

i=1

�βt�i � Δpt�i/0.25

�+ εt

▶ HFTs reduce 0.6 percent of their net holdings in 1 second.

▶ HFTs trade in the direction of the price movement for the first 5 seconds.

▶ HFTs trade in the direction of the price movement for the first 5 seconds.

High Frequency Traders, May 3 - 5

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Δyt = α + φΔyt�1 + δyy�1 +20�

i=1

�βt�i � Δpt�i/0.25

�+ εt

▶ HFTs trade in the direction of the price movement for the first 2 seconds.

▶ Trade in the direction opposite the price movement alter 4 seconds.

▶ On May 6, HFTs reverse the direction of their trading a lot faster.

High Frequency Traders, May 6

Net Holding and Price (Market Makers)

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HFTs follow the same strategy, but do it faster on May 6.

“”

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Inventory Dynamics

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Net Holding and Price (HFTs)

Δyt = α + φΔyt�1 + δyy�1 +20�

i=1

�βt�i � Δpt�i/0.25

�+ εt

▶ Intermediaries reduce 0.4 percent of their net holdings in 1 second.

▶ Intermediaries trade opposite the price movement for the first 2 seconds.

▶ Trade in the same direction as price alter 3 seconds.

Intermediaries, May 3 - 5

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Net Holding and Price (HFTs)

Δyt = α + φΔyt�1 + δyy�1 +20�

i=1

�βt�i � Δpt�i/0.25

�+ εt

▶ Intermediaries trade opposite the price movement contemporaneously.

▶ Reverse the direction of trade at lags 1 through 4.

Intermediaries, May 6

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Intermediaries get run over by the price move.

“”

Page 33: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Advanced regression proposed in the work

Δyt = α + φΔyt�1 + δyy�1 +20�

i=1

�βt�i � Δpt�i/0.25

�+ εt

+DDt

�αD + φDΔyt�1 + δDyt�1 +

20�

i=0

[βDi � pt�i/0.25]

+DUt

�αU + φUΔyt�1 + δUyt�1 +

20�

i=0

[βUi � pt�i/0.25]

▶ By creating two sets of dummy variables for the Down and Up phase of the Flash Crash, we could test whether HFTs or Market Makers change their trading during Flash Crash.

▶ We get the similar results like the last slides we just mentioned.

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The profit and loss of HFTs

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The profit and loss of Market Makers

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HFTs and Intermediaries in the Flash Crash

13:32:00 - 13:45:28

HFTs follow the same strategy

Intermediaries get caught on the wrong side

13:45:33 - 14:08:00

HFTs are less aggressive

Intermediaries close position and about half of them withdraw.

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Which traders provide the liquidity ? “

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Changes in net position of Fundamentaland Opportunistic traders

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Trading Volume during the Flash Crash

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The Flash Crash▶ 13:32 A larger fundamental seller initiates a sell program

▶ 13:42 HFTs reverse the direction of their trading (start selling)

▶ 13:42 HFTs reverse the direction of their trading (start selling)

▶ 13:45 “Hot Potato”: Lack of fundamental and Opportunistic Buyers

▶ 13:45:33 - 13:45:58 Prices stabilise

▶ 13:45:28 - 13:45:33 5-second trading pause

▶ 13:46 Fundamental buyers lift prices up

▶ 14:08 Price are at the 13:32’s level

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Hot Potato Effect

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Conclusion

04.

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Conclusion

▶ High Frequency Traders did not trade differently on May 6 than other days.

▶ Flash Crash triggered by the arrival of an unusually large 75,000 contract sell order.

▶ Appropriate regulatory actions and self-regulatory organisation is necessary to encourage HFTs to provide immediacy.

▶ HFTs did not hold large enough inventories either to cause or prevent the Flash Crash.

Page 44: High frequency trading for the flash crash

Thanks for your attention