Higher Tick Size Leads to +10% Drop in Algorithmic Trading

OPINION

Order anticipation strategies have attracted intense attention and generated heated debates in the context of high-frequency trading (HFT). The problem of “back-running” risk that order flow leaks valuable information substantially changes the fundamental investor’s behavior.

Trading algorithms enable order anticipation strategies in an attempt to locate and trade in front of large buyers and sellers.

Large fund managers know they cannot purchase huge blocks of stock at once, so they often divide up their purchases into smaller orders. Algorithmic trading systems quickly recognize those early purchases and immediately start buying the same stock in anticipation that the larger fund’s bulk purchases will temporarily drive up its price.

Slowing down the order pathway is good for the markets  

Introducing higher pricing mins through Tic size offsets “back running” in trading anticipation and work to stabilize the markets.  In the case investors arguably rely on pertinent market information to make pricing decisions.

Since 2005, stock prices have been decimalized and the minimum tick size has dropped to 1 cent. That change favors automated trading, because it’s much less costly to move in and out of stocks at high speed when the incremental price changes are smaller.

 

Leave a Comment

Journal

News

VMSI Edges Up to 25.2, But Market Remains Deep in Risk-Off Territory

What is VMSI? The VICA Market Sentiment Index tracks institutional capital flows, risk posture, and macro volatility weekly. Built for ...
News

Institutional Allocators Aren’t Watching Volatility—They’re Designing Into It

VICA Partners Intelligence | April 2025 A regime transition in capital allocation is underway—and the smartest money is leading the ...
News

VMSI Drops to 22.4 as Risk-Off Accelerates and Volatility Deepens

VMSI Gauge Chart — Displaying Current Sentiment and Risk Level The VMSI gauge indicates a current sentiment score of 22.4, ...