Perhaps the HFT issue is about the size and amounts of shares traded. Since my positions sizes are larger than most retail traders accounts, it does impact me but for smaller accounts perhaps not. I do trading research every year and in 2006 I joined a day-trading methodology group. Through 5 years of watching about 300 named traders, only 1 of them is still trading for sure. He trades more like I do though. We had lunch last week and went through the lists of names. He knew his city and I knew mine. Gone, all gone. Some of the loss sizes of these people are astounding to me for disciplined day trading. (75000 of 100000 trading account for example) Their biggest issue IMO is the belief that any system can work long term in a dynamic chaotic environment.
My desk had 40+ traders. Some of which have been trading for 8-10 years and were very profitable traders. All gone now except for 2 guys. Kaput. The financial crisis and the subsequent market environment pretty much carried all of them out. 1 of them whom I know still daytrading is very versatile and I suspect that's the key to his survival, he could trade anything under the sun, super liquid, illiquid, tight spreads, wide spreads, everything. If it moved, he traded it, whether it was SPY or STRA and 8 out of 10 times, he did it profitably. How many traders are truly like that though? It's very rare. Longevity is a big problem in this business. The opportunity costs given up are great. In the long run, someone who has a job and career would still come out on top.