Market Tactics

Sophisticated market participants can use a variety of tools, tactics, and advantages to profit by achieving short-term or long-term market outcomes
Summary
  • Short selling, derivatives, leverage – profiting from price declines via short positions, options, swaps, and other leveraged instruments
  • Influence over market narrative – shaping sentiment through media connections, funded research reports, analyst ratings, or social channels
  • Access to alternative trading venues – using dark pools, crossing networks, and other ATSs to trade without moving the visible market
  • Extended-hours trading – acting on information before or after regular market sessions when liquidity is thin
  • Complex ETF/Index strategies – moving baskets of securities to indirectly affect specific stocks
  • Information edge – faster or earlier access to news, order flow data, or research
  • Algorithmic & high-frequency trading – exploiting microsecond opportunities and order-book imbalances
  • Large capital base – capacity to absorb risk, scale trades, and influence prices through volume
  • Order book spoofing / layering – placing and canceling large orders to create false impressions of demand or supply (illegal if intentional, but still seen in some markets)
  • Quote stuffing – flooding the market with rapid-fire orders to slow competitors’ systems and obscure real trading intentions
  • Wash trading / matched orders – buying and selling the same security to create artificial volume or price levels (banned, but harder to detect in some OTC or crypto markets)
  • Marking the close – strategically trading near the day’s end to influence the official closing price (which can affect benchmarks and derivatives payouts)
  • “Painting the tape” – small trades at progressively higher or lower prices to create a misleading price trend
  • Market maker exemptions – designated market makers can short without an uptick, have capital requirement relief, and access order flow information
  • Reg SHO exemptions – certain bona fide market-making activities are exempt from locate/borrow rules that apply to regular short sellers
  • Block trade privileges – institutions can privately negotiate large trades off-exchange, avoiding visible market impact.
  • Foreign jurisdiction routing – executing trades via overseas entities to skirt certain domestic restrictions or reporting timelines
  • Regulatory arbitrage – structuring products (e.g., total return swaps) to gain synthetic exposure without triggering ownership disclosure or position limits
  • Special liquidity provisions – some funds or dealers have standing agreements with exchanges or regulators to provide liquidity in ways ordinary traders can’t
  • Exemptions from position limits – certain hedging or bona fide trading activities are exempt from speculative position limits in commodities and derivatives