I could literally answer this question with a one page response but I will keep it short.
99% of the time I'm adding liquidity. Keep in mind I trade stocks, not futures, and with the rebate passthroughs on various ecn's using various routing strategies, most of my trades are either negative commission or close to (meaning I get paid a small fee to trade). I prefer to get paid to trade rather than the other way around.
Second, my entries are generally not at the nbbo. Typically, I'm entering in an area either above or below the current best bid/offer somewhere based upon my expectations at the time and therefore, I'm not fighting for a spot in line at the nbbo when price gets to my entry. There are other ways to jump the queue but I won't get into that. When I exit, I offer out. Occasionally I will hit out but even then I can use a take/make exchange to reduce my fees.
My understanding of adverse selection is from the specialist days when they were obligated to make markets with players they KNEW were better informed than they were. I am neither making markets nor looking to capture the spread. Sure hft can game my orders but my agenda is very different than what they're doing.
In the old NYSE prices-set-in-fractions days:
Resting orders outside the bid and offer where great!
The reason resting NYSE orders were great for savvy traders was that if the specialist jumped over your order to fill a big order, he had to improve your fill price to the price he gave on the next print. (Example: Stock price is 100 and your buy order was 99 and 7/8. If the next print was 99 and 3/4 you got that print and recieved a bonus 1/8)
Entire strategies were built around Fishing Orders that were canceled and resent a little farther away if the stock price drifted too close to the order because the trader was looking for the specialist to trade through him and improve his fill price.
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Thanks for your great reply!
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