نتایج جستجو برای: algorithmic trading

تعداد نتایج: 55635  

Journal: :CoRR 2014
Sergei Chichin Quoc Bao Vo Ryszard Kowalczyk

With the rapidly growing demand for the cloud services, a need for efficient methods to trade computing resources increases. Commonly used fixed-price model is not always the best approach for trading cloud resources, because of its inflexible and static nature. Dynamic trading systems, which make use of market mechanisms, show promise for more efficient resource allocation and pricing in the c...

2013
Matthew Brook Craig Sharp Gary Ushaw William Blewitt Graham Morgan M. Brook

High frequency trading (HFT) environments provide technologies that enable algorithmic trading within automated marketplaces. The most prominent example of an HFT environment is within equity trading, where many millions of trades are achieved at a high volume to gain a reasonable cumulative profit. Such environments rely on low latency/high performance technologies to allow trades to react in ...

Journal: :IJISTA 2008
Li Lin Longbing Cao

Stock trading plays an important role for supporting profitable stock investment. In particular, more and more data mining-based technical trading rules have been developed and used in stock trading systems to assist investors with their smart trading decisions. However, many mined trading rules are of no interest to traders and brokers because they are discovered based on statistical significa...

2002
Ross J. Anderson

Many existing and proposed electronic payment systems are quite insecure and the number of claims involving fraudulent or disputed transactions is rising steeply. The banks’ recent action in limiting customers’ liability for such transactions through automatic teller machine (ATM) systems to £50 may in practice limit ATM claims to those cases where consequential losses are involved, but growing...

1995
Sam Lipson

Financial trading has been described as ‘‘technological warfare’’. Whether or not you believe the metaphor, trading systems certainly involve a tremendous need for highly reliable, interruption free, real-time data. Real-time, in this case, means presented accurately and without delay. Current practice of medium to large trading floors often involves Unix based workstations and significant atte...

1995
Robert A. Schwartz

This paper summarizes the responses to a questionnaire sent to equity traders through TraderForum of the Institutional Investor. The respondents manage in total a very significant percentage of equity assets under management in the United States. The focus of the questions was the extent of the demand for immediate execution of orders. We found that the majority of traders are willing to trade ...

Journal: :Electronic Markets 1994
Henri Spinnler

Finally, the retailer can send the order to the supplier at the press of a button, with the order first being automatically converted and then transmitted to the supplier. All messages are sent in accordance with the UN/EDIFACT standard. The messages received by the distribution centre from all retailers are automatically checked for availability (ability to deliver) and, if the result is posit...

2001
Darryl N. Davis Yuan Luo

A requirement analysis for a portfolio management in stock trading is presented. This provides a theoretical foundation for a stock trading system. The overall portfolio management tasks include eliciting user profiles, collecting information on the user’s initial portfolio position, monitoring the environment on behalf of the user, and making decision suggestions to meet the user’s investment ...

2008
Antonia Azzini Andrea Tettamanzi

Automated Trading is the activity of buying and selling financial instruments for the purpose of gaining a profit, through the use of automated trading rules. This work presents an evolutionary approach for the design and optimization of artificial neural networks to the discovery of profitable automated trading rules. Experimental results indicate that, despite its simplicity, both in terms of...

2002
Stephen J. Rassenti Vernon L. Smith Bart J. Wilson

At the University of Arizona, electronic trading (now commonly known as e-commerce) in the experimental laboratory began in 1976 when Arlington Williams conducted the initial experiments testing the first electronic “double-auction” trading system, which he had programmed on the Plato operating system. The term “double auction” refers to the oral bid-ask sequential trading system used since the...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید