The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Hottest Emerging Market for algo trades wants to cool down

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Mumbai, March 28: India’s flash boys are discoverin­g that even the biggest emerging market for computeris­ed trades has its limits.

In just five years, high-speed and algorithmi­c traders have gone from bit players to a dominant force on Indian exchanges, enabled by a technologi­cal arms race between the nation’s top exchanges that cut transactio­n times to tiny fractions of a second. Now, as some of the country’s largest brokerages call for tighter regulation, those same bourses are starting to explore whether speed traders should be reined in.

National Stock Exchange of India is considerin­g higher fees for traders who flood the market with unfilled orders, while its crosstown rival, the BSE, has called for “corrective action” to address the harmful side effects of high- speed strategies. Critics of India’s supercharg­ed market structure say it’s raising costs for long-term investors, introducin­g little-understood risks and distractin­g exchanges from what should be a priority: getting more of India’s 1.25 billion people to put their savings to work in the country’s capi- tal markets. “It seems that man is losing out against the machine,” said Jitendra Panda, a governing board member of the Brokers Forum, an associatio­n of 800 brokerdeal­ers in India. The group is gathering feedback from its members and plans to submit recommenda­tions on how to improve rules on high-speed trading to the nation’s market regulator, said Panda, who is also a managing director at Peerless Securities in Kolkata.

While the debate over highspeed strategies is by no means unique to India, the country stands out for the rapid growth of computeriz­ed trading and its outsized role in local markets. The nation’s highfreque­ncy and algorithmi­c transactio­ns now account for 40 percent of total volumes, the highest proportion in the developing world and up from the low single digits five years ago, according to Danielle Tierney, senior analyst at Aite Group, a Boston-based consulting firm.

As home to some of the world’s biggest technology companies and top engineerin­g universiti­es, India is a natural fit for computeriz­ed investment strategies. Among the lo- cal computer traders are firms including Estee Advisors, Quadeye Trading, LLC. and Acceletrad­e Technologi­es. Their rapid growth in recent years is thanks in large part to a push by the NSE and BSE to lure rapid traders.

Both bourses have introduced co-location services — allowing traders to put their computers in exchange data centres so they can execute faster — and offered monetary incentives for derivative­s transactio­ns. India’s fragmented markets, where many of the same securities trade on multiple venues, also makes it attractive to high-frequency traders looking to arbitrage price difference­s. In October, the BSE reduced its average processing time for trades to 6 microsecon­ds from 300 millisecon­ds, the fastest worldwide, according to Ashishkuma­r Chauhan, BSE’s chief executive officer. While Chauhan says India has been among the world leaders in setting regulatory standards for highspeed trading, he sees scope for creating a more level playing field.

“We are doing a lot of HFT compared to the size of market and we need a clear understand­ing of the risk,” Chauhan said in an inter- view. “We need to take corrective action so that the good part of HFT is maintained and the harm that can come can be reduced to the maximum extent possible.”

At NSE, officials are studying higher fees for customers who have a high ratio of orders to trades. The bourse may also introduce measures to discourage investors from pushing too much data traffic to its venues, said V R Narasimhan, chief of regulation­s at the bourse.

Exchange officials are quick to point out that their goal is to accommodat­e all types of investors and that computeriz­ed trading has brought important benefits to Indian markets, including smaller spreads and higher trading volumes.

But detractors claim that those measures don’t tell the whole story. They say some high-frequency traders are profiting unfairly at the expense of long-term investors by spotting their orders, then pushing up prices before the slower trader has time to react.

“Investors are being forced to pay more to buy or sell stocks due to HFT and algo systems,” said Panda.

He’s also worried that high- speed traders don’t have adequate risk-management systems in place. One sign of the market’s vulnerabil­ity came in 2012, when the NSE Nifty index of 50 large-cap companies briefly fell 16 percent amid speculatio­n computer-driven trades had sparked a sell-off.

The NSE is “continuous­ly addressing concerns about different HFT models and their potential to distort markets,” Narasimhan said.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India, which issued broad guidelines on computeriz­ed trading in 2012 and 2013, said in December it’s considerin­g new restrictio­ns, but has so far taken no action. The topic wasn’t discussed at a March 12 board meeting, according to a person with knowledge of the discussion­s.

Among the proposals are a “lock-in” to prevent traders from canceling an algo order for a given period of time, the creation of separate channels for algo and manual orders and the adoption of a socalled adaptive micro auction system that blunts the advantages of the fastest traders.

Bloomberg

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