How much does a HFT trader typically make?

Quote from MarkBrown:

they make $30 per minute per $100,000 margin. m

That's believeable as an average, but what's the standard deviation ?

I posted this and got no responses...It appears everyone is clueless in regards to the winning strategies and their potential.
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=231782
I'll tell you one thing: the easiest thing in the world to do is to create a losing algo ! Anyone can do that. Only the best of the best can create winners.
 
Quote from WinstonTJ:

There was a time when there were huge differences in latency - where even fairly big companies were still using 10/100 networks and gig switches and circuits were extremely expensive.

Today with advances in virtualization technology 10-gig Ethernet is becoming the standard and 10Gig NICs are pretty cheap - for $500 you can get a dual-port Intel 10G NIC (ebay).

Because 1000mbps is now the standard and shops like Verizon have pumped FiOS everywhere we have a pretty decent infrastructure backbone and this has eliminated much of the latency arb that used to exist. That said, there is still a massive difference between colo and non-colo. What was a second is now a millisecond.

You will probably disagree with me Winston (and I respect your opinion a lot), but the whole hft trading thing seemed like an arms race that is pointless.
 
Quote from newwurldmn:

You will probably disagree with me Winston (and I respect your opinion a lot), but the whole hft trading thing seemed like an arms race that is pointless.

I don't disagree - but think about this... We used to have 3G now we have 4G. We used to only have 10/100 NICs now gigabit and Wireless N is standard (and cheap btw).

Who knew that you could take a video card and use GPUs as processing power??

Yes its dumb, overkill, way out of control, etc. but it allowed companies like Verizon to introduce FiOS and brought gigabit networking from Wall Street to Main Street.

It really allows the average day trader to have a millisecond time frame versus seconds or minutes. It has also compressed the space a bunch and made it a lot more competitive.

I'm totally against the industry in general because I think there isn't really any "edge" just some people have different or better access than others and I don't believe that you should be able to make money when someone else can't just because you are an insider and have different access...

That said, NASA brought us stuff like Gore Tex and I believe that HFT and low-latency trading has improved the overall end-user computing experience drastically.
 
Quote from WinstonTJ:



I'm totally against the industry in general.

maybe u should go for the industry. learn and adopt new advance technology.

u don't want to be a dinosaur and ride a horse instead of a car
 
Quote from emg:

maybe u should go for the industry. learn and adopt new advance technology.

u don't want to be a dinosaur and ride a horse instead of a car

I've said openly to those that know me: when my stuff is no longer profitable I'm done.
 
Quote from WinstonTJ:

I've said openly to those that know me: when my stuff is no longer profitable I'm done.

nobody knows u but your family and close friends.

comprende amigo! go get yourself some mojitos
 
There are no clear numbers, but HFT is a battlefield all on it's own, effectively an arms race of computer hardware, and programming-skilled traders. Tons of fun IMO, even though I haven't been involved anywhere as long as some people! Try HFT without programming, just intuition and a set of rules. Blows Modern Warfare 3 out of the water, IMO.
 
Quote from syswizard:

Care to divulge your source of this information ?

just myself and partner - the profits and frequency depends on the profit per trade we try and accomplish. well over 90% wins, i know it sounds crazy to the average trader. but i was working with a cray in the early 80's thru the mid 90's this is not an overnight success. it's a 25 year programming obsession to win at a game and you evolve or die. you experiment even when you don't have to, preparing for loses. risk management and levering occupy your time after you have the edge. and you learn more about banking than you ever wanted to know - you become a phd in banking and your amazed how you know so much more than any banker does and how dangerous the whole system is. depressing shit. m

ps i would like to also correct that after all related expenses it really works out to about $11 a minute per 100,000.

also someone asked what the std-dev is - there is none to speak of.
 
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