The second argument against PFOF is that having retail on exchange would tighten spreads. One important thing to note about PI statistics is that they assume that the NBBO spread is static, but it isn’t. In fact it’s quite likely that the spread would change with retail flow.
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Since lit market market makers have to interface with statistically more toxic flow, they have to quote wider spreads to compensate for the “cost” implicit in trading with that flow. So the argument is that making lit flow less toxic would cause MMs to quote higher spreads.
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The third and final argument against PFOF is that there is a data/information advantage that is conferred to MMs because they get to see retail flow first.
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For example, if a MM sees retail flow directionally tilted towards selling, they will quote their bid on-exchange lower than the NBB.
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This has an effect on competition in the market making industry: other MMs without this data face disproportionately higher adverse selection when their orders execute at an NBBO price which is “crumbling” or otherwise quickly changing.
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And it’s worth mentioning here that this factors into why there have been so few new retail equity MMs in the last ~20 years: MMs have to work to set up these relationships with retail brokerages and create commercial arrangements to buy flow.
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The combination of the information advantage conferred by PFOF plus the duopolistic concentration in equities wholesaling means that the two largest firms in effect have strong knowledge of the direction of the NBBO, pricing others out of the business.
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However, we should be clear that the information advantage does not equate to MMs “frontrunning” their clients, it merely means they are pricing differently than their competitors outside the NBBO and getting picked off at lower rates.
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Anyway I hope this was helpful, I’m sure I made mistakes and typos as i wrote this in a few minutes after the twitter space. i also left out some deeper cases in the effort to stay brief and readable. anyway jump into the replies to yell at me all you want
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Replying to @drewg__
Going to ask some naive questions. What data go into the "reference" price for a given security? Is there a concept in cash equities of a "primary" market (like in spot FX/cash UST)? Do dark markets price off lit? Does incremental volume done off market cheapen value of lit data?
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1) assuming you mean the NBBO,“bid” and “offer” are defined under SEC Rule 600(b)(9) to mean the bid price or offer price at which an exchange or FINRA member is “willing to buy or sell one or more round lots of an NMS security.”
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Replying to @drewg__ @realjonbovi
2) the primary market for equities is basically whoever gets allocated in an equity issuance during an IPO or a secondary by an issuing firm's investment bank
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Replying to @drewg__
thanks, and sorry i was not clear. was trying to understand whether an equity exchange derives less pricing power on its market data the more business goes off-exchange. knee-jerk reaction says 'yes' but can also see that market needs to anchor against something
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