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The Cost of Latency in High-Frequency Trading


Ciamac C. Moallemi


Columbia Business School - Decision Risk and Operations

Mehmet Saglam


Princeton University - Bendheim Center for Finance

February 5, 2013


Abstract:     
Modern electronic markets have been characterized by a relentless drive towards faster decision making. Significant technological investments have led to dramatic improvements in latency, the delay between a trading decision and the resulting trade execution. We describe a theoretical model for the quantitative valuation of latency. Our model measures the trading frictions created by the presence of latency, by considering the optimal execution problem of a representative investor. Via a dynamic programming analysis, our model provides a closed-form expression for the cost of latency in terms of well-known parameters of the underlying asset. We implement our model by estimating the latency cost incurred by trading on a human time scale. Examining NYSE common stocks from 1995 to 2005 shows that median latency cost across our sample roughly tripled during this time period. Furthermore, using the same data set, we compute a measure of implied latency, and conclude that the median implied latency decreased by approximately two orders of magnitude. Empirically calibrated, our model suggests that the reduction in cost achieved by going from trading on a human time scale to a low latency time scale is comparable with other execution costs faced by the most cost efficient institutional investors, and is consistent with the rents that are extracted by ultra low latency agents, such as providers of automated execution services or high frequency traders.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 55

Keywords: High-Frequency Trading, Latency

JEL Classification: G10

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Date posted: March 17, 2010 ; Last revised: February 27, 2013

Suggested Citation

Moallemi, Ciamac C. and Saglam, Mehmet, The Cost of Latency in High-Frequency Trading (February 5, 2013). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1571935 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1571935

Contact Information

Ciamac C. Moallemi (Contact Author)
Columbia Business School - Decision Risk and Operations ( email )
New York, NY
United States
HOME PAGE: http://moallemi.com/ciamac

Mehmet Saglam
Princeton University - Bendheim Center for Finance ( email )
26 Prospect Avenue
Princeton, NJ 08540
United States
HOME PAGE: http://www.princeton.edu/~msaglam
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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