Trading and exchanges

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 29: The Truth About Insider Trading

This is the last chapter of the book, and Harris saved a spicy one for the end. Chapter 29 is about insider trading. You might think it is simple: insiders trade on secret info, SEC catches them, they go to jail. But Harris shows that the whole topic is way more complicated than that. There are actually serious economists who argue insider trading should be legal. Let me explain.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 27: Floor Trading vs Electronic Trading Systems

Chapter 27 is a fascinating time capsule. Harris wrote this around 2003, when the debate between floor trading and electronic trading was still alive. The NYSE was building a new trading floor. The Chicago exchanges were still mostly pit-based. Reading it now, knowing how completely electronic trading won, is like reading someone in 1995 carefully weighing the pros and cons of email versus fax machines.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 26: How Markets Compete With Each Other

Should all trading in a stock happen in one place, or is it okay to have dozens of venues competing for your order? Chapter 26 is about exactly this tension, and honestly, it is one of the most relevant chapters in the whole book if you want to understand why modern markets look the way they do.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 24: NYSE Specialists and Designated Market Makers

The New York Stock Exchange used to have these people called specialists. Each one was assigned a handful of stocks and was basically the boss of all trading in those stocks. They stood at a physical post on the floor, saw every order coming in, ran the opening auction, and traded with their own money when nobody else would. One of the most privileged positions in finance. And one of the most controversial.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 23: Index Funds, ETFs, and Portfolio Trading

If you have money in a Vanguard or Fidelity index fund, or you buy SPY or VOO through your brokerage app, Chapter 23 is basically about you. Harris wrote this in 2003, but it reads like a prediction of what actually happened. Index investing went from a niche idea to the default way normal people invest. This chapter explains why.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 20: Volatility and Why Prices Bounce Around

Chapter 20 is one of the shorter chapters in the book, but it covers something every trader thinks about constantly: volatility. Why do prices move? Why do they sometimes move way more than the actual news justifies? Harris breaks it down into two types and explains why the distinction matters more than most people realize.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 19: What Liquidity Really Means and Why It Matters

Everyone in finance talks about liquidity. Traders want it, exchanges advertise it, regulators worry when it disappears. Yet if you ask five people what liquidity actually means, you will get five different answers. Chapter 19 is where Harris finally pins it down. His definition is simple: liquidity is the ability to trade large size quickly, at low cost, when you want to trade. That is it. But the simplicity hides a lot of complexity.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 17: When Arbitrage Goes Wrong (Part 2)

In Part 1 we covered what arbitrage is, the different types (pure vs speculative), and how arbitrageurs keep prices consistent across markets. Sounds like easy money, right? Buy low here, sell high there, pocket the difference. This part is about why it is not that simple. Harris lays out four specific risks that make arbitrage genuinely dangerous, and he has some incredible real-world examples to prove it.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 17: How Arbitrageurs Keep Markets Honest (Part 1)

Chapter 17 is about arbitrageurs, and it is one of those chapters that changes how you think about markets. Arbitrageurs are the people who keep prices consistent across different markets and different instruments. Without them, you could have oil priced at 80 dollars in New York and 70 dollars in London, and nobody would fix it.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 16: Value Traders and How They Find Bargains

Chapter 16 is basically the Warren Buffett chapter. Not that Harris mentions Buffett by name, but the whole idea of value trading is: figure out what something is really worth, wait for the market to misprice it, buy low, sell high. That is the entire philosophy in one sentence. The hard part is everything else.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 15: How Big Trades Get Done Without Crashing Prices

Say you manage a pension fund and you need to sell 500,000 shares of some stock. You cannot just drop a market order on the exchange. The order book does not have that much liquidity sitting around. If you try to force it through, you will eat through every level of the book and crash the price on yourself. Chapter 15 is about how these giant trades actually get done.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 14: Spread Components and What They Tell You (Part 2)

In Part 1 we covered dealer spreads, the two spread components (transaction costs and adverse selection), and why uninformed traders lose no matter what order type they use. Now Harris finishes the chapter with equally important stuff: what determines equilibrium spreads in real markets, how public traders compete with dealers, and what factors predict whether a given instrument will have wide or narrow spreads.

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 13: How Dealers Make Money in Markets

Dealers are merchants. They buy low, sell high, pocket the difference. If you ever bought a used phone from a resale shop, you understand the concept. The shop bought it for less, sells it to you for more. Financial market dealers do the same thing with stocks, bonds, and currencies.

The Cops on the Beat: Specialists (Chapter 24)

The Designated Driver of the Market

In Chapter 24, we go to the floor of the New York Stock Exchange to meet the Specialists. These aren’t just regular traders; they are members who have been given a specific job by the exchange: keep the market for your stocks “fair and orderly.”

Trading and Exchanges Chapter 11: Front-Runners and Order Anticipators

Chapter 11 is about the shady side of trading. Harris introduces order anticipators: people who profit not by knowing what a stock is worth, but by figuring out what other traders are about to do and trading before them. They are parasites. Harris uses that word deliberately. No better prices. No liquidity. They just extract money from other people’s trades.

Performance Prediction and Factor Models (Chapter 22, Part 2)

In Part 1, we saw that statistical tests need 20+ years of data to reliably separate skilled managers from lucky ones. But the problems run even deeper. This section of Chapter 22 covers the traps that make performance evaluation even less reliable than the basic statistics suggest, and what actually works for predicting who will trade well.

Measuring Liquidity and Transaction Costs in Practice (Chapter 21)

You cannot manage what you cannot measure. Harris opens Chapter 21 with this principle and then spends the rest of the chapter explaining just how hard it is to measure transaction costs properly. The basic idea is simple: compare what you paid to some benchmark price. But the choice of benchmark determines everything, and every benchmark has flaws.

Liquidity: What It Is and Why Every Trader Should Care (Chapter 19)

Everyone talks about liquidity. Traders talk about it. Regulators talk about it. Financial journalists definitely talk about it. But Harris makes a sharp observation right at the start of Chapter 19: rarely does anyone define what they actually mean. People use the same word to describe different things, and then they wonder why they cannot agree on anything.

The Price Harmonizers: Arbitrageurs (Chapter 17, Part 1)

The Enforcers of Reality

In Chapter 17, we meet the Arbitrageurs. These are the traders who make sure the world makes sense. If gold is $2,000 in New York and $1,990 in London, the arbitrageur buys in London and sells in New York until the prices match. They are the “price harmonizers.”

Buy-Side Traders: How Institutions Trade (Chapter 18)

If you are a retail trader, you tap “buy” on your phone and your order fills in milliseconds. Easy. But if you manage a pension fund and need to buy 500,000 shares of something? That is an entirely different problem. Chapter 18 is about the people who solve it.

The Final Boss: Value Traders (Chapter 16)

The Liquidity Providers of Last Resort

In Chapter 16, Larry Harris introduces us to the Value Traders. While dealers provide “immediacy” for small orders, value traders provide “depth” for the massive moves. They are the market’s ultimate safety net.

The Heavy Lifters: Block Traders (Chapter 15)

Moving the Whale

In Chapter 15, Larry Harris takes us away from the public exchange and into the “Upstairs Market.” If you want to buy 500,000 shares of a stock, you don’t just dump a market order into your app—you’d move the price 10% against yourself before the order was half-finished.

The Merchants of Liquidity: Dealers (Chapter 13)

The Shopkeepers of the Market

In Chapter 13, we meet the Dealers. Larry Harris compares them to any other merchant—like a car dealer or a grocer. They buy inventory at a low price (the Bid) and sell it at a high price (the Ask). Their product isn’t the stock itself; it’s Immediacy. They are selling you the ability to trade right now.

Bluffers and Market Manipulation: Tricks Traders Use (Chapter 12)

If Chapter 11 was about the parasites who trade ahead of you, Chapter 12 is about the con artists who trick you into trading badly. Bluffers are profit-motivated traders who create false impressions to fool other traders. And Harris walks through their playbook in detail that is genuinely uncomfortable.

Trading and Exchanges by Larry Harris - A Book Retelling Series

So I just finished reading “Trading and Exchanges: Market Microstructure for Practitioners” by Larry Harris. And I have thoughts.

This is one of those books that’s been sitting on finance reading lists for years. Published in 2003 by Oxford University Press (ISBN: 0-19-514470-8), it’s basically the textbook on how markets actually work. Not the “buy low sell high” stuff you see on social media. The real mechanics. How orders flow, why spreads exist, what dealers actually do, and why some traders consistently lose money to others.

What Makes a Good Market? Liquidity, Transparency, and Fairness (Chapter 9)

What does “good” even mean when we talk about a market? This is not a philosophical question. It is a practical one that affects every regulation, every rule change, and every debate about how trading should work. Chapter 9 is Harris building a framework for answering this question, and it turns out to be one of the most important chapters in the book.

Why People Trade: The Real Motives Behind Market Activity (Chapter 8)

Here is a question that sounds simple but almost nobody answers honestly: why do you trade?

Not “to make money.” That is what everyone says. Harris dedicates Chapter 8 to pulling apart all the different reasons people actually show up to the market. And the taxonomy he builds is genuinely useful. Because if you do not understand why you trade, you are probably doing it wrong. And if you cannot figure out why the person on the other side of your trade is trading, you have no idea whether you are the smart money or the dumb money.

Broker Duties, Conflicts, and the Trust Problem (Chapter 7, Part 2)

Most brokers are honest. But the relationship between broker and client has a built-in conflict that can’t be fully eliminated. The second half of Chapter 7 in “Trading and Exchanges” covers this conflict, the ways dishonest brokers exploit it, and the systems markets have built to keep everyone (mostly) honest.

The Conflict of Interest: Brokers (Chapter 7, Part 2)

Is Your Broker on Your Side?

In the second half of Chapter 7, Larry Harris gets into the messy reality of the Principal-Agent Problem. You are the principal (the boss), and the broker is the agent. In a perfect world, they do exactly what you want. In the real world, they have their own bills to pay.

Brokers: Their Role in Financial Markets (Chapter 7, Part 1)

Brokers are the middlemen of trading. You might think of them as a necessary evil, but Larry Harris makes a compelling case in Chapter 7 of “Trading and Exchanges” that they provide services most traders simply cannot replicate on their own. Understanding what brokers do, and what they might do to you, is essential whether you’re a retail trader or managing billions.

Order-Driven Markets: Auctions, Matching, and Price Priority (Chapter 6)

Order-driven markets are where most of the action happens. Almost every major exchange in the world is order-driven. If you understand how these markets match buyers to sellers and price the resulting trades, you understand the mechanics of modern trading. Chapter 6 of “Trading and Exchanges” breaks it all down.

Market Structures: Quote-Driven vs Order-Driven Markets (Chapter 5)

Not all markets work the same way. The rules, the systems, and the structure of a market determine who can trade, what information they can see, and who actually makes money. Chapter 5 of “Trading and Exchanges” lays out a framework for understanding market structures. And once you understand this framework, you can look at any market in the world and quickly figure out how it works.

Orders and Order Properties: The Building Blocks of Trading (Chapter 4)

Every trade starts with an order. And if you don’t understand orders, you’re basically showing up to a poker game without knowing the rules. Chapter 4 of Larry Harris’s “Trading and Exchanges” is all about orders, what they are, and the properties that make each type useful (or dangerous) in different situations.

The DNA of Trading: Orders and Their Properties (Chapter 4)

Orders: The Building Blocks of Strategy

If you can’t personally stand on the exchange floor and shout your trades, you need orders. In Chapter 4, Larry Harris breaks down the different types of instructions you can give your broker and why the specific type you choose is the biggest factor in your success.

The Trading Industry: Exchanges, ECNs, and Market Players (Chapter 3, Part 1)

Chapter 3 of Trading and Exchanges is the chapter where Larry Harris dumps the entire trading industry on your desk and says, “Here is how it all fits together.” It is dense with jargon and institutional detail. Harris even admits you can skip it if you already know the industry. But for everyone else, this chapter provides the context that makes everything after it make sense.

Trading Stories: How Markets Really Work (Chapter 2)

Chapter 2 of Trading and Exchanges is basically Larry Harris saying: “Let me show you what actually happens when someone trades.” And it is one of the most eye-opening chapters in the book, especially if you have only ever traded through an app where you tap “buy” and shares magically appear in your account.

What Is Market Microstructure? Chapter 1 of Trading and Exchanges

Larry Harris opens Trading and Exchanges with a simple observation: markets are fascinating. They change constantly as prices adjust to new information, as winning traders replace losing traders, and as new technologies evolve. That is a pretty understated way to describe the most complex competitive arena in the world.

Trading and Exchanges by Larry Harris: A Market Microstructure Deep Read

So you want to understand how markets actually work. Not the “buy low, sell high” platitude your uncle repeats at Thanksgiving. Not the Reddit version where everything is either a short squeeze or a conspiracy. The real mechanics. How orders get filled, why prices move, who makes money, and who gets eaten alive.