the common argument against it is that it guarantees a technological arms race and by those conditions pushes the smaller groups out of the competition.
it's unfair in the same vein that the rich are always offered better loan rates than the poor. Yeah, it's obvious why that would be, but it's not fair either.
although imo pushing small-backer arbitrage out of the equation is a good thing.
> the common argument against it is that it guarantees a technological arms race and by those conditions pushes the smaller groups out of the competition.
But a cursory examination of history would reveal that the literal opposite has happened.
What HFT arbitrage does is rapidly push markets with different prices into alignment with each other. If you banned HFT but kept multiple markets, the inevitable result would be markets with bigger differences in prices for longer.
The only kind of trading that really good HFT trading pushes out is other slower less efficient arbitrage traders, but why should we want more worse arbitrage traders if the result is markets being more out of sync?
What's important economically is that traders that trade based on fundamentals can do so efficiently across multiple markets. Efficient HFT arbitrage trading helps that, it doesn't hinder it.