Quote from candletrader:
If a select number of market participants could see market action 15 minutes before the majority, you would not deem that as fair...
HFTs don't quite get a 15 minutes headstart on us.... but a supercomputer running an HFT algorithm only needs a few milliseconds to front run orders in order to exploit the imminent market flow...
This is not fair...
If you are banned from having the same set up as them, I agree its not fair. If everybody has the option to trade in that time frame, I think its fair. Much like the person sitting at the front of an auction hall will hear the auctioneer milliseconds before the people at the back, there is no getting around the limitations of our physical universe. Someone will always see broadcasted information slightly before someone else.
But what it boils down to, the value they are harvesting from the market as HFTs is extremely different than the value you are harvesting from the market as a manual trader, trading on longer time frames. They are in the realm of liquidity providing, market making and stat arbitrage. Their trading should only improve the prices you are getting trading large swings (if you are trading MKT orders, if you are trading LMT, don't complain that you are suddenly competing with experienced liquidity providers. because at that point, you are trying to take their business)
If once upon a time you were able to extract a little extra money from your large swing or directional trading by tapping into a bit of the value which exists at the micro level, I don't think you have any place to complain that other traders are coming in and trading that micro level much faster. They are not unfairly harvesting that value now, the other sides of those trades will always go to the best price, you are no longer able to offer the best price in that time frame.
I really have no sympathy for any businessman who complains when their market becomes more competitive and yet they want to be able to run as inefficiently as always. As for truly unfair practices, I agree they have to go, but that doesn't involve faster computation or faster reactions.
I think people look at the market and only see one business, where in reality, there are many levels and ways to make money in the market, by either providing service or capital gains. It shows lack of understanding when there are complaints which blur the lines between those businesses and call for forced less efficient business practices (which hurt liquidity removing market participants from slower reactions and worse prices) to allow home traders a chance at highly competitive, highly lucrative and highly technologically advanced business practices.