Two Survival Structures of Market Makers and Arbitrageurs

链捕手Опубликовано 2026-05-16Обновлено 2026-05-16

Введение

Market makers and arbitrageurs represent two distinct survival structures in high-frequency trading. Market makers primarily use limit orders (makers) to profit from the bid-ask spread, enjoying high capital efficiency (nominally 100%) but bearing inventory risk. This "inventory risk" arises from passive, fragmented, and discontinuous order fills in the limit order book (LOB). This risk, while a potential cost, can also contribute to excess profit if managed within control boundaries, allowing for mean reversion. Market makers essentially sell "time" (uncertainty over execution timing) to the market for price control and low fees. In contrast, cross-exchange arbitrageurs typically use market orders (takers) to exploit price differences or funding rates, resulting in lower nominal capital efficiency (requiring capital on both exchanges) and higher transaction costs. Their risk exposure stems from asymmetries in exchange rules (e.g., minimum order sizes), execution latency, and infrastructure risks (e.g., ADL, oracle drift). These exposures are active, exogenous gaps that primarily erode profits rather than contribute to them. Arbitrageurs essentially sell "space" (capital sunk across venues) for localized, immediate certainty. Both strategies engage in a trade-off between execution friction and residual risk. Optimal systems allow for temporary, controlled risk exposure rather than enforcing zero exposure at all costs. Their evolution converges towards hybrid models: arbitra...

Author: @Boywus

 

In microscopic high-frequency trading, two factions have long coexisted: one is market-making trading that lives on the spread, offering single-leg quotes, usually placing orders as makers, enjoying nominally full capital utilization; the other is cross-exchange arbitrage, targeting cross-exchange price differences and funding rates, usually taking orders as takers, with capital utilization only half of market makers in nominal terms.

This article will discuss the characteristics of their risk exposures and explain their differences.

The Origin of Risk Exposure

In the world of limit order books, all risk exposures essentially stem from the cost of exchanging the power to "control time" for the power to "control price."
It can be understood as a free option: when you choose to be the liquidity provider (maker), you gain pricing power. You decide at which absolute price to enter, and the system queues you at that price level. However, there is no free lunch. As a cost, you give away the right to choose "when to execute" and even "whether to execute" for free to all Takers in the market.
The two major challenges market-making trading itself must solve are: "inventory risk" and "fair pricing." After posting orders, if the inventory is not cleared in the short term, we can regard it as a "risk exposure," and the risk control system will evaluate its quantity in real time.
When cross-exchange arbitrage uses taker orders, due to different order placement environments on the two exchanges, such as slippage, disconnection, and step size rules, exposure that is not a perfect 1:1 hedge will arise.

Execution Characteristics of Risk Exposure

The fragmentation of market makers originates from the passive discontinuity of order book matching. Market makers attempt to quote on both sides, but under the sweeping actions of iceberg orders and order-splitting robots in dense LOBs, your Bid might be partially filled in batches like 0.1, 0.5, 2.1 units, while your Ask side remains untouched. The fragmentation of market makers is high-frequency and randomly distributed along the timeline, requiring reliance on continuous minor price adjustments.
The fragmentation of cross-exchange arbitrage originates from the asymmetry of multi-market rules and matching delays. The exposure is exogenous, actively crossed,such as step size rules: Exchange A requires 1 BTC per lot, while another exchange requires 10 BTC per lot. This leads to Exchange A's order being filled, inevitably forming a "risk exposure," but usually less than 10 BTC, ultimately causing the hedging instruction to be squeezed.

Exposure Characteristics of Risk Exposure

Market Maker's Position Opening Characteristics: When a market maker's unilateral Bid is filled and a position is built, while the Ask order remains unfilled for a long time and the price does not breach the Bid. This indicates the market is in a healthy mean-reverting state, this inventory exposure is favorable, waiting for a rebound to close the position at any time.
Market Maker's Position Closing Characteristics: When a market maker encounters a unilateral market movement and accumulates a large amount of long inventory, the system attempts to place Maker sell orders to close positions through Skewing. If these orders remain unfilled for a long time, it indicates that the market's OFI (Order Flow Imbalance) is deteriorating extremely, and the market is in a accelerated plunge. At this point, the closing Maker orders become ineffective, inventory losses increase linearly, and the system faces a crisis of liquidation or forced stop-loss.
The exposure characteristics of cross-exchange arbitrage lie mainly at the engineering level:
  • Exchange ADL (Auto-Deleveraging)

  • Exchange oracle drift

  • Exchange funding being artificially manipulated

  • Breakdown of asset correlation

The Relationship Between Risk Exposure and Profit

Both are playing a game of geometric expectations regarding "execution friction loss" and "residual risk volatility." Systems that obsessively pursue zero exposure will ultimately be ground down by high transaction friction.
Truly good architectures must allow the system, within a certain time frame and amount, to choose to "let the bullets fly for a while" between cost and risk.
Market makers pursue high win rates, high turnover, and low single-trade returns. Market makers enjoy nominally 100% extreme capital utilization by sacrificing time control rights in exchange for cheap Maker fees and spreads. Therefore, the inventory exposure of market makers, within a certain range, directly contributes to excess profits.
When inventory does not breach risk control boundaries, clearing the inventory accompanied by mean reversion yields returns far more explosive than simply eating a fixed spread on both sides. Market makers exchange "local time passivity" for "long-term probability certainty."
Cross-exchange arbitrage pursues deterministic spatial price differences and structural returns (such as funding rates). Since it mainly takes orders as a taker, its nominal capital utilization is halved (must prepare margin on both sides simultaneously) and it pays high taker fees.
Therefore, the risk exposure in cross-exchange arbitrage trading (whether the fragments caused by exchange restrictions or the residual delays in multi-leg execution) is almost purely a drain on profits. Arbitrageurs tolerate fragmented exposure because forcefully using taker orders to flatten small-step fragments incurs slippage costs that outweigh the risk of holding the fragments directly. Arbitrageurs exchange "spatial capital sinking" for "local immediate certainty."

Convergence in the Micro Order Book

The ultimate evolutionary direction for both is to completely abolish dogmatic beliefs in a single order form at the micro-execution level. Whether it's institutional market makers or mature retail arbitrageurs, they will eventually restructure their systems into a hybrid strategy based on cost, latency, and order flow toxicity.
To save costs, cross-exchange arbitrageurs will also use maker mode for opening and closing positions, making their behavior and exposure management highly overlap with the inventory Skewing logic of market makers. Market-making trading will dump orders using takers when the risk control system is highly alert; they will also use various hedging methods for unfavorable inventory, and in extreme cases, even form complete lock positions.Finance is the pricing of risk. They interact with the market in different ways, exchanging for different return ratios. Market makers sell time; arbitrageurs sell space. One exposes inventory to the market; the other sinks capital into the market.

They are all using different forms of risk exposure to exchange for that meager and brutal certainty from the market.

Связанные с этим вопросы

QWhat are the two main survival structures in high-frequency trading discussed in the article?

AThe two main survival structures are market makers, who profit from spreads by placing maker orders, and cross-exchange arbitrageurs, who profit from price differences and funding rates across exchanges by primarily taking orders as takers.

QAccording to the article, what is the nature of risk exposure in a limit order book world?

AIn a limit order book world, all risk exposure essentially stems from the trade-off where one exchanges the 'control over time' (i.e., when and if an order will be executed) for the 'control over price' (i.e., at which price to place the order).

QWhat is the primary source of fragmentation for market makers compared to cross-exchange arbitrageurs?

AMarket maker fragmentation arises from the passive discontinuity of order matching on the order book, where orders can be partially filled at high frequency. Cross-exchange arbitrageur fragmentation comes from the asymmetry of exchange rules (like order size steps) and matching delays between different markets.

QHow does the article characterize the relationship between risk exposure and profit for market makers versus cross-exchange arbitrageurs?

AFor market makers, inventory exposure within risk limits can contribute directly to excess profit, especially during mean reversion, as they pursue high win rates and turnover. For cross-exchange arbitrageurs, risk exposure (from rule mismatches or execution lags) is almost purely a cost or drag on profit, as they prioritize immediate execution with taker orders.

QWhat is the ultimate evolutionary direction for both market makers and arbitrageurs, as suggested by the article's conclusion?

AThe ultimate direction is to move beyond rigid adherence to a single order type. Both will evolve into hybrid strategies based on cost, latency, and order flow conditions. Arbitrageurs may use maker orders to save costs, and market makers may use taker orders for risk management, making their behaviors and exposure management highly converge.

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