1) It is a common fallacy that there is "the exchange" or "the market". The market is an aggregation of exchanges (and non-exchange traded instruments) across a wide variety of jurisdictions and localities. But even though there is no central coordination between all that jumble, the instruments are correlated. That is, the change in price, demand, or availability of one is a signal about the pice, demand and availability of the others.
2) The market is made up of participants who exist on a band of price/time sensitivity. That is, someone like a retail trader doesn't have extreme price sensitivity but may have time requirements. In trading that style of participant is known as "dumb" (oh traders, you so PC).
3) Market makers make all their money trading spread for time but thats not where the latency games come into play. The latency is because...
4) Smart money is price sensitive (or price informed) and they tend to be where market makers lose money. Smart money tends to be either prop traders with particular algos, large block hedge funds or other market makers. Those are the people who cause market makers to play latency games, because its a vector a market maker can control that keeps them smart. They will never be smarter than the hedge fund that knows its going to buy a bunch of shares and therefore drive up the price, but they can at least jump out of the way quicker than the other smart money.
It is a common fallacy that retail orders ever go to stock exchanges. This is a good way to determine someone telling the truth. Here's proof: http://www.nanex.net/aqck2/4704.html
1) It is a common fallacy that there is "the exchange" or "the market". The market is an aggregation of exchanges (and non-exchange traded instruments) across a wide variety of jurisdictions and localities. But even though there is no central coordination between all that jumble, the instruments are correlated. That is, the change in price, demand, or availability of one is a signal about the pice, demand and availability of the others.
2) The market is made up of participants who exist on a band of price/time sensitivity. That is, someone like a retail trader doesn't have extreme price sensitivity but may have time requirements. In trading that style of participant is known as "dumb" (oh traders, you so PC).
3) Market makers make all their money trading spread for time but thats not where the latency games come into play. The latency is because...
4) Smart money is price sensitive (or price informed) and they tend to be where market makers lose money. Smart money tends to be either prop traders with particular algos, large block hedge funds or other market makers. Those are the people who cause market makers to play latency games, because its a vector a market maker can control that keeps them smart. They will never be smarter than the hedge fund that knows its going to buy a bunch of shares and therefore drive up the price, but they can at least jump out of the way quicker than the other smart money.