I'm just going to post this, WTF.
I've spent the better part of 2010 working on a business plan, funding, systems, consultants, the works, to build a new HFT-like company, looked at acquiring a couple of smaller companies in this space floundering, and talked to to seriously high up CTOs and CIO of some major technology companies looking to move into this space who don't have the wall street resumes to get past the nets at Goldman or BlackRock, but who could with a startup on their resume that did it their way. NY has this "thing" against silicon valley going back to the late 90s I find particularily humourous, since we were the ones bringing IPOs to them, not the other way around. They were the ones who created the bubble, we were building the companies, great companies, that died because of wall street greed.
So when I say I'm "on the fence" about proceeding, despite having the capital and the talent and a very sound business plan, I'm trying not to talk shit to promote what I'm doing, I'm more soliciting the opinions of a few selectively stealth individuals lurking in the weeds thinking the same thing but haven't found the right opportunity to reveal themselves to stand up and declare their presence.
Personally, I think HFT will be severely limited in terms of sub-penny and fronting by SEC restrictions in the software, the flash crash will create a whole mess of new problems for the detritivores scraping the bottom, and will likely eliminate the majority of the problem so the field is leveled. I'm more interested in slower HFT, strategic trades, position trades in the "dark" pools out there among hedges and such based more on fundamentals than calculations, major short positions against overboughts and overvalued going into 2012 recovery earnings, mass market psychology, volatility, movement during corrections and rallies, taking advantage rather than being taken advantage of.
If any of that makes sense, I'm around...
Quote from Maverick74:
Don, I must have missed the question but to my knowledge, my firm does not engage in HFT.
Why don't you just pony up and get into the HFT game then? Are you trying to tell me that your firm is being blocked from the action? Build the software, contact those liquidity pools and get in the game. Honestly Don, I can't understand what you are saying here. Are you telling me that you are willing to spend the money and labor to get in that game but are not able to?
I know some HFT guys here in Chicago Don. Matt Gray who was on CNBC yesterday with your buddy, is a friend of mine. The guy built his operation from scratch Don, from scratch. He spent a lot of money and time to get into the game. Nobody stopped him. What is stopping you? Please help me understand this because I obviously am missing something here. I am all ears. You have the floor Don.