Quote from dddooo:
It's a combination of several factors:
-Volume per individual. One institutional trader moves tens of millions of shares a day, one average day trader moves a few thousand.
It may be a fact but you haven't demonstrated any relevance.
-Relationship with customers - institutional traders deal directly with their clients, when a mutual fund wants to sell IBM the contact GS or MER trading desks or IBM specialist directly. Institutional traders provide a service to their clients, day-traders
Well first of all I'm not limiting the discussion to day traders, but simply individual traders not operating out of a pit or an institution. The individual trader is his own client. Perhaps this is part of what annoys the institutions.
How do you explain that hedgers, large investors and mutual funds hate day-traders when according to you they benefit from their existance.
I did? All I said was the speculation facilitates hedging and vice-versa.
They are not dummies you know.
Of course. They are smart enough to know that the more they retain control over access to the markets, the more they can profit from them. Seems to me they are first and foremost annoyed that their exclusive access to the markets is being threatened. The insider's club has a few "undesirables" milling around who weren't invited, and some of them are drinking the champagne.
Another question, if a trader buying from a hedger and assuming his risk is good, what about another trader who's front-running the hedger?
Clearly the overall net function of the market is what matters. There are a lots of participants with a lot of different objectives and methods.
Do you really think the markets would notice or detiriorate if all day-traders suddenly disappear?
I never suggested that they would.
On the other side there is no doubt that should institutional traders, pit traders, MMs or Specialists suddenly go on strike - the markets would seize to exist.
Sure. And?
I think what you're saying is roughly analogous to saying that independent voters should just stay home because no one individual's vote could possibly change the outcome of the election, whereas the parties get out votes on a large scale, organize most of the process, and there'd be severe dysfunction if the parties disbanded, and the parties are often annoyed at the way the independents are voting. The facts are true but the conclusion doesn't follow.
Fletch
). BTW I am not saying there is anything wrong with being a trader, I simply provided the social perception of trading and tried to explain why I believe it was accurate. I personally could not care less what society thinks of traders but I prefer not to fool myself and face the reality, you may of course choose to believe all you want that society needs and values goods and services we as traders provide.