Apr 29, 2015 -- 3:29PM, zooot wrote:
The guy being prosecuted is a lone trader being targeted because he worked out how to beat the real manipulators = the Wall St High Frequency Traders with computers located onsite at exchanges and special rights to get "peaks" at the order flow before the rest of the market. They systematically front run all large orders due to built in conferred advantages pinching a slice of your pension fund orders with almost no risk (a bit like if BF let people pay for the right to "see" every order being placed before it is placed - frightening thought). They place and cancel fake orders 20 x a second!The guy still was a point and click trader using a mouse but found his orders (large) were hard to fill cause people jumped in front of him so he worked out a way to hide by placing orders during the confusion or price changes.The powerful could not let that happen as it might mean they make less money and so have targeted him. In the process they are revealing themselves and his strategy and so it may make it harder for them to front run everything with their unfair advantage in the longer term.He was not spoofing in the BF sense. He was really just trying to trade and scalp without being front run bt computers working at milli second speed.
He had £100k in a betting account. Have to wonder if it was because he was loaded and enjoyed gambling, or was using similar techniques on here when he wasn't trading the stock markets.
Apr 30, 2015 -- 6:45AM, Getafix wrote:
DStyle that is true... however, in the early days of betfair (I remember reading on this forum) that there was a bug in which if you fired in a bet and cancelled it immediately it would appear on the screen to other users for x amount of time (x being a much bigger amount of time than the actual time it existed) due to a cache mechanism they employed.