High-frequency traders exploiting momentary discrepancies in stock prices can potentially profit by as much as 0.77% per day, according to a latest analysis of Nasdaq ITCH data focusing on Dow Jones Industrial Average stocks. The study, published in the Journal of Investment Strategies, highlights the critical importance of speed – measured in microseconds – in capitalizing on these “microtrend” anomalies.
Researchers found that an idealized trader with zero latency could achieve returns exceeding 3% on specific stocks. However, the profitability of this strategy is acutely sensitive to even slight delays. The maximum tolerable latency, the study calculates, is an average of 14.6 microseconds for an equally weighted portfolio, with individual stocks exhibiting a range of 0 to 40 microseconds. Beyond these thresholds, the advantage erodes.
The research characterizes the exploitable trend-length anomalies through a high-frequency trading, microtrend-following strategy. The study emphasizes that the crossing of bid-inquire spreads significantly impacts profitability in this type of trading, and that fast market access is paramount.
The findings underscore the ongoing arms race for speed in financial markets. High-frequency trading (HFT), driven by increased electronic automation, relies on sophisticated computer programs to generate and execute orders at extremely high speeds. Investment banks, hedge funds, and institutional investors are all actively developing and deploying algorithmic trading strategies to identify emerging price movements, as noted in a 2022 paper on novel modelling strategies for high-frequency stock trading data.
The Journal of Investment Strategies study specifically examines the potential profitability and speed requirements for exploiting stock trend-length anomalies. The reliance on Nasdaq ITCH data – a real-time, order-by-order data feed – provides a granular view of market activity, allowing researchers to quantify the impact of latency on trading performance.
While the study quantifies the potential gains, it also implicitly acknowledges the challenges. Achieving zero latency is practically impossible, and even minuscule delays can significantly reduce profitability. This creates a competitive landscape where firms invest heavily in infrastructure and technology to minimize latency and gain an edge.