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You would think, by the same arguments, that the stock market could always just trade at 15-minute intervals. Why not? But people go crazy when researchers (e.g. Eric Budish at U. Chicago) suggest lowering the frequency to milliseconds, let alone seconds or minutes.



There are different, additional, objections to that. For example, it would make life rather difficult for market makers, which would mean a lot of the liquidity would dry up, which means the spread would widen out, which means trading would be more expensive.

I think there is scope for designing market mechanisms which have the volatility-reduction effects of periodic auctions, but which still allow market makers to hedge. I hope people are working on those.


> which means trading would be more expensive

And how is that a bad thing in and of itself? It would presumably knock out some of the ultra-low-margin HFT but so what? If it would have the effect of turning the stock market into less of a roulette table, with fewer gamblers compared to bona fide investors - isn’t that a good thing?


And then there are questions like: Should trading be convenient? Inexpensive?




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