Europe’s high-speed traders under pressure to fine-tune

Regulation, rising costs and an increasingly competitive landscape are forcing high-frequency traders to take a pit stop and assess their business models

There was one overlooked fact in a European Central Bank working paper on high-frequency trading published this month. On page 25 of 57, the report’s authors gave an estimate of the combined global revenue pool of HFT firms. It was $5 billion a year.

If proof was ever needed, the figure demonstrated that high-speed trading has become a multibillion-dollar business, and one in which stock exchanges, brokers and technology providers have a huge stake.

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Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With TrumpExternal link

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