Exchanges put limits on cancellation rates as measured by a multiple of filled orders.
You have to allow strategies that can induce other strategies as by definition those also increase liquidity. It’s a difficult problem to explain to anyone except the very few people who can understand the extremely complicated feedback loops that result from bots fighting bots, however the regulators actually have access to counterparty tagged exchange event data and what is found when this is analyzed is that the net cost for liquidity that is extracted by market makers and short term traders from longer term participants is continuously decreasing not increasing. The system is becoming more and more efficient and not less. This is good for markets and the economy. There are also less people working in financial markets per capita than ever before, granted those who are might include a higher percentage of highly skilled and specialized and educated individuals than previously, which some might argue might be better used in some other industry, but that is rightfully not what the market wants.
There is absolutely no logical reason to “kill off this entire field” those sentiments are purely envy based reactions from those who don’t understand what is happening.
You have to allow strategies that can induce other strategies as by definition those also increase liquidity. It’s a difficult problem to explain to anyone except the very few people who can understand the extremely complicated feedback loops that result from bots fighting bots, however the regulators actually have access to counterparty tagged exchange event data and what is found when this is analyzed is that the net cost for liquidity that is extracted by market makers and short term traders from longer term participants is continuously decreasing not increasing. The system is becoming more and more efficient and not less. This is good for markets and the economy. There are also less people working in financial markets per capita than ever before, granted those who are might include a higher percentage of highly skilled and specialized and educated individuals than previously, which some might argue might be better used in some other industry, but that is rightfully not what the market wants.
There is absolutely no logical reason to “kill off this entire field” those sentiments are purely envy based reactions from those who don’t understand what is happening.