Nice to read something on this site from someone apparently knowing what he is talking about. I just wonder have you ever come across evidence that firm like DE Shaw or Renaissance ever at all engaged in anything remotely definable as high frequency trading? I have not come across such evidence yet and thus refrain from including them in the hft camp.
I'm close enough to fully agreeing with you not to justify a long reply haha. I still think most of my professors are genius, but maybe I lack context there, and I don't want to argue something subjective when we are generally in agreement that trading strategies found in academic papers are either generally terrible or that the good ones are wrapped in NDAs. Also agree that most of the good research is done by people at least heavily involved in industry. Again, I also don't think it's the job of academics to hunt for holy grail strategies either. They should be working on things that are more generally applicable like pricing models or portfolio level methods, so I think it's no surprise that good departments don't publish papers entitled "A Strategy for Trading..."
Pivoting a bit back to the lack of research on HFT, this is a topic I find really frustrating also. HFT is definitely not a lazy man's game, just storing and maintains the data necessary to Backtest strategies that would hardly count as HFT is becoming nearly a full time hobby for me. Also, it's no surprise that the best current HFT practitioners and the OGs of HFT aren't just average academics, they're undeniable geniuses. David E Shaw, Simons, Blair Hull, Malyshev. These are largely top physics and CS people; they wouldn't even have considered writing theses on trading! My point is that HFT is just not something academics seem to care about. It might be too hard, too dependent on specific firms infrastructure to generalize, too far from their areas of expertise; whatever be the case. I've found some decent research on the impact of latency and some informative stuff on order book dynamics, but that's it really. I'd love to share papers later after school here or on PM if you like.
