WHAT IS ORDERFLOW TREADING STRATEGIES?
The term “Order
Flow” throws up mixed expressions when used by different kind of
traders. For us at Vtrender and the small community of traders we work with on
the Nifty and the BankNifty futures, for
every session, Order Flow
trading is a way of life!
For many of us we
cannot think about placing a trade today without looking at what the Order Flow
information is telling us.
For today I want to
take a step back and delve into what we look at when we want to see these Order
Flow charts. But for that, we need to have a realistic look at the marketplace
of today and by that, I mean the shortest time frame used by
derivatives traders like me every day. If you are into derivatives
trading, you may like to read on. For the investors working only on the concept
of “time will make everything right” and the oft-repeated ” mutual fund
sahi hai” this is not for you.
The derivative world
of the kind I knew, changed forever in 2007 when the word “HFT” or
high-frequency trading became common lingo. The media got into it with that
“all I know is that I know everything’ kind of attitude and HFT was
equated with speed and proximity and “risk-free” trading etc. etc. It hardly is
and they make as many losses as us, though some are engineered for a “getting to
know you” or a future strategy. The media went on to say that HFT’s won
all the time ignoring the few dozen (maybe more) firms which went belly up
every time the market moved away from the normal. Even today anytime any
instrument does a 2 sigma move, I scan the papers to see if any HFT went under!
Back in 2008 a lot
of us were told that with the advent of HFT most of retail would be out!! Such
statements made even today show that people have a very little
understanding on how the markets run or work. Markets have always been
about an auction process between a Buyer and a Seller and aggressive
player/players drive the market up or down in their pursuit of value. This
value is a perception, a landscape and a clean understanding of this principle
fuels a price move. If there is a landscape (read markets) and players in the
landscape with differing views the markets will function depending on who has
the bigger edge in understanding the changing landscape in every
time frame. This has been true, whether you traded the markets in the
past decade the past 20 years or the last 50. And it’s also the reason that
retail who can see or have a bigger edge can easily beat sophisticated programs
who often come to the market with an established bias.
In the Trading word of today a
distinction need to be made between algorithmic trading and HFT and the newest
kid on the block AI (Artificial intelligence) which is poised to make
quite a few HFT techniques redundant.
Algorithmic trading
is machine generated orders without human intervention
HFT would be the same on a bigger scale. There is an
important difference between the 2 and all algorithmic trading is not HFT.
Artificial Intelligence or AI is the newest kid on
the block and would one day take down HFT
So,
what are the kind of strategies these machine executed orders look at?
to secure an edge however small that may be
- Index Arbitrage –
This is by far the most common algorithmic execution method used and it
may not be all HFT. It involves selling the index futures and buying
the underlying cash stocks. When done with big quantities it can generate
lots of returns. It is very popular for an instrument such as the
BankNifty which starts a series with a premium of 150- 180 points and closes
at zero. Terms associated with it are “basket buying” as also “program
trading”. The term program trading is generally also used for buying a
basket of stocks maybe more that 15 or 20 at a time with an execution focus
on time rather than price.
- Latency Arbitrage –
Latency arbitrage is all about speed differentials and involves having a
different view of the order book at the same period. This is used by
proprietary firms who have broken the 1 second barrier and gone to micro
seconds to have a view of what the order book is. The predator in this
case mostly a proprietary trading firm uses processes to scan the order
book looking for big institutions and funds who are about to enter a big
order in the market. Data about price changes must literally travel
the distance between participants, and that trip can be faster or slower
depending on the technology a firm is using and how far a participant is
from the source of the data. Speed is the key here and put to max use by a
proprietary firm who can single out an ETF or a fund still dependent on a
legacy execution method due to regulatory obligations etc. These prop
firms base their trades on what price will do next sensing the big orders
coming in the next few micro seconds and are almost instantly profitable
- Market Making –
Buying the bids and selling the offers 1 or 2 mini steps at a time. This
is extremely small sized trading not more than 10 lots at a time and
designed to keep the liquidity of the market unaltered. Works extremely
well in low volatility environments where price movement is not much.
HFT’s use the almost stationary prices to make fractions based on a
probability law. Not all trades are profitable, and some are also
scratched at cost. But it improves the liquidity of the market immensely.
Focus is kept only on the top of the orderbook and is extremely rewarding
for all liquid stocks and indices. Won’t work as well with illiquid
instruments
- Sentiment/ news based HFT –
These are different and often contradictory HFT’s competing often in times
of news flow or a sudden aggressive change in the market sentiment. This
is seen around news events such as the RBI meet or the FM Live during
market hours or some other CMD of a company appearing on Live TV in market
hours. Algorithms are tied to keywords in the information newly flowing in
and can tell the prop firm in milli seconds whether the information is
positive or negative and positions are built accordingly. This works
extremely quickly, and the move is often over before someone at a retail
desk can hear it, let alone process it. Often the biggest explanation for
why price moves quickly as a certain news break. The predatory HFT can
move an instrument like the Bank Nifty up or down
200 points in microseconds even as something like an RBI news is just
breaking
- Spoofing/ layering –
Almost extinct today and declared illegal in the US. This involves placing
limit orders in the order book for executing at a higher or lower price
than the LTP but removing them before they are executed. The spoofer hopes
to see the actual demand and supply in the market by such an activity.
Layering involves placing the same kind of orders evenly across different
prices. The most famous case of spoofing was that of Navinder Singh Sarao
who was held responsible for the flash crash back in 2010
- Exploratory Trading –
This involves an HFT creating orders and executing them to test demand or
supply beyond a known level of reference and booking out when the momentum
is establishing. This strategy is also popular as a momentum ignition
strategy. The HFT instigates other traders to take positions by building
smaller orders and causing other market participants to trade aggressively
creating a price move. He then trades out. The HFT uses this strategy to
identify the zone for a future order and is gauging the liquidity and the
demand-supply at that place. The HFT generally loses on the first few
trades whilst assessing the demand/supply but covers up once the momentum
ignition has happened. Also, information flowing in the form of the actual
demand or supply at that point is marked for later
- Artificial Intelligence–
This is the big Daddy of them all and would eventually replace the HFT
which has dominated the landscape this decade. The difference between an
HFT and deep learning strategies if that they do not approach the market
or the trade with a pre-conceived bias but examine the data for any useful
information it might contain. Deep learning does this by using layers to
summarize the content of previous layers and the deeper it goes the more
intelligent it gets. These are immensely complex relational
strategies and engineered by the smartest brains on the planet today.
Constant tweaking and redevelopment as also substantial
investments is required to get to the final objective but the absence
of a bias to begin the process, marks AI as the one to watch for the
future
So, to sum up, this
is the complex world we are trading with as derivative traders now especially
those of us who are in the shortest time frame.
This is how our
competition today has evolved and to match it we have to begin with knowledge
of what it is.
At Vtrender we make
efforts to understand the who, what, where, why and how, first before forming
our own strategies and tweaking it to ensure that we stay with an edge This is
the situation today and it may be different tomorrow. In fact there never has
been a time in history when the markets haven’t changed. We are the market- you
and me.
For that, I must know my
“me” – and that is my strategy well
And
I must also know the “you” – the people and the institutions who are
trading on my side or the other side.
OrderFlow can show me who is on my side or the
other.
Thankfully I have
invested in the knowledge of OrderFlow to know this. Have you?
To read more about
how an OrderFlow chart will benefit you go here – https://vtrender.com/why-i-trust-an-orderflow-chart/
To know more about
how to implement best practices in OrderFlow reading visit the Vtrender Trading
Room at – https://vtrender.com/trading-room/
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