{"id":3975,"date":"2026-04-30T16:18:20","date_gmt":"2026-04-30T20:18:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/?page_id=3975"},"modified":"2026-04-30T16:18:23","modified_gmt":"2026-04-30T20:18:23","slug":"hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/","title":{"rendered":"HFT &amp; Arbitrage Trading Glossary"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n<!-- PAGE: \/en\/glossary\/                                            -->\n<!-- Title target:  HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014              -->\n<!--                Definitions of 55 Key Terms                     -->\n<!-- Slug:          glossary                                        -->\n<!-- Intent:        Informational + topical authority + LLM         -->\n<!--                citation hub                                    -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- WHY THIS PAGE EXISTS:                                           -->\n<!-- A glossary is the single most LLM-citable page format. Each    -->\n<!-- term is a self-contained chunk with a clear definition \u2014        -->\n<!-- exactly what retrieval-based AI search engines (ChatGPT,        -->\n<!-- Perplexity, Gemini, Claude) extract and cite. Also captures     -->\n<!-- massive long-tail traffic: every \"what is X arbitrage\"          -->\n<!-- \"what is fill rate\" \"what is LD4\" query lands here.             -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- WHERE TO PASTE:                                                 -->\n<!-- New WordPress page \u2192 Custom HTML Gutenberg block.               -->\n<!-- After saving, link from EVERY page that uses these terms        -->\n<!-- (homepage, product pages, education pages, performance,         -->\n<!-- about) \u2014 link the FIRST mention of each term to its anchor      -->\n<!-- in glossary. Example: \"<a href='\/en\/glossary\/#latency-          -->\n<!-- arbitrage'>latency arbitrage<\/a>\".                              -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- TITLE TAG (Yoast):                                              -->\n<!-- HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined         -->\n<!-- (58 chars)                                                      -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- META DESCRIPTION (Yoast):                                       -->\n<!-- Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage     -->\n<!-- terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation,       -->\n<!-- FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.                        -->\n<!-- (155 chars)                                                     -->\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 1. TL;DR + intro                                    -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<div style=\"background: #f1f7ff; border-left: 4px solid #0066cc; padding: 20px 24px; margin: 0 0 32px 0; border-radius: 4px;\">\n  <p style=\"margin: 0 0 10px 0; font-weight: 700; font-size: 15px; color: #003a75; text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 0.5px;\">About this glossary<\/p>\n  <p style=\"margin: 0; color: #1a1a1a; line-height: 1.7;\">A reference of 55 terms used across HFT, forex arbitrage, latency arbitrage, hedge arbitrage, triangular arbitrage, broker execution, and the infrastructure (VPS, datacenters, feeds) that supports HFT trading. Definitions are written for traders, not academics \u2014 each entry tells you what the term means and why it matters when running an arbitrage account.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>This glossary explains the vocabulary of high-frequency arbitrage trading. It covers the <strong>strategy types<\/strong> (latency, hedge, triangular, statistical), the <strong>infrastructure<\/strong> (VPS, colocation, feeds, broker platforms), the <strong>execution metrics<\/strong> (fill rate, slippage, latency, drawdown), and the <strong>commercial vocabulary<\/strong> (prop firms, dealing desks, anti-detection plugins) you need to understand the rest of this site and the wider arbitrage industry.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each term is a self-contained definition. Where useful, an entry includes a short example, a cross-reference to a related term, or a link to a deeper page on this site. Use the alphabetical jump-list below to find a term quickly.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 2. A-Z jump navigation                              -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<div style=\"background: #f8f9fa; padding: 16px 20px; margin: 24px 0 32px 0; border-radius: 6px; border: 1px solid #e0e0e0; text-align: center; font-size: 16px; line-height: 2;\">\n  <a href=\"#section-a\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">A<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-b\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">B<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-c\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">C<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-d\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">D<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-e\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">E<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-f\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">F<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-g\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">G<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-h\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">H<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-i\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">I<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-l\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">L<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-m\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">M<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-n\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">N<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-o\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">O<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-p\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">P<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-q\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">Q<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-r\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">R<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-s\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">S<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-t\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">T<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#section-v\" style=\"margin: 0 6px; font-weight: 600; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none;\">V<\/a>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 3. SECTION A                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-a\">A<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"algorithmic-trading\">Algorithmic trading<\/h3>\n<p>Trading executed automatically by a computer program based on pre-defined rules \u2014 entry conditions, exit conditions, position sizing, risk limits. The program reads market data, makes the decision, and sends the order without a human in the loop. Algorithmic trading is the broader category that contains <a href=\"#hft\">HFT<\/a> and all <a href=\"#arbitrage\">arbitrage<\/a> strategies as subsets.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"anti-detection-filter\">Anti-detection filter<\/h3>\n<p>A software setting that disguises arbitrage activity from broker monitoring systems. Typical filters include randomized lot sizing (so trades do not all use identical 0.10 lots), enforced minimum holding times (to prevent the obvious &#8220;millisecond round-trip&#8221; pattern that brokers flag), and session diversification (spreading trades across hours rather than concentrating during a single news window). Anti-detection filters extend account survival on tolerant brokers from days to months but cannot bypass brokers that explicitly prohibit arbitrage.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"arbitrage\">Arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>The simultaneous purchase and sale of the same or related assets to profit from a temporary price difference. In forex and CFD markets the price difference is usually tiny \u2014 fractions of a pip \u2014 and arises from <a href=\"#latency\">latency<\/a> between brokers, mispricing across instruments, or temporary order-book imbalances. Arbitrage requires speed, low transaction cost, and either a permissive broker or a multi-broker structure to capture the difference before it disappears.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 4. SECTION B                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-b\">B<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"backtest-engine\">Backtest engine<\/h3>\n<p>A simulation tool that replays historical tick data through a strategy to estimate how the strategy would have performed in the past. A useful backtest engine for arbitrage uses millisecond-resolution data and incorporates broker-specific latency and execution behaviour, because arbitrage results are dominated by execution mechanics rather than directional prediction. Backtest results are a ceiling, not a guarantee \u2014 live results typically arrive at 70\u201390% of backtest fill rates on a correctly configured setup.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"bid-ask-spread\">Bid-ask spread<\/h3>\n<p>The difference between the highest price a buyer will pay (bid) and the lowest price a seller will accept (ask) for an instrument at a given moment. The spread is the per-trade cost on every round-trip, so wider spreads compress arbitrage profitability disproportionately. ECN brokers offer raw spreads near zero plus a fixed commission; market makers offer wider spreads with no separate commission. For arbitrage, raw-spread + commission is almost always cheaper.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"broker\">Broker<\/h3>\n<p>The intermediary that gives a retail trader access to the forex or CFD market. Brokers are categorized by execution model: <a href=\"#ecn\">ECN<\/a> brokers route orders to a network of liquidity providers; <a href=\"#stp\">STP<\/a> brokers pass orders straight through to a counterparty; <a href=\"#market-maker\">market makers<\/a> take the other side of client trades internally. The execution model determines whether arbitrage is viable \u2014 ECN and quality STP brokers permit it, market makers usually do not.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 5. SECTION C                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-c\">C<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"cfd\">CFD (Contract for Difference)<\/h3>\n<p>A derivative contract that pays the difference between the entry and exit price of an underlying asset, without the trader actually owning the asset. Most retail forex, gold, indices, and crypto trading is in fact CFD trading. Arbitrage strategies described on this site work on CFD instruments because that is what retail brokers offer, even though the mechanics are identical to spot forex.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"colocation\">Colocation<\/h3>\n<p>The practice of placing your trading server (<a href=\"#vps\">VPS<\/a>) in the same physical datacenter as the broker&#8217;s matching engine. Colocation reduces network round-trip time from tens or hundreds of milliseconds down to fractions of a millisecond. For <a href=\"#latency-arbitrage\">latency arbitrage<\/a> this is not optional \u2014 without colocation the strategy does not work. The four datacenters that matter for forex\/CFD are <a href=\"#ld4\">LD4<\/a> (London), <a href=\"#ny4\">NY4<\/a> (New York), <a href=\"#ty3\">TY3<\/a> (Tokyo), and FR5 (Frankfurt).<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"cqg\">CQG<\/h3>\n<p>An institutional-grade market-data and order-routing provider widely used for futures and spot forex price feeds. CQG is one of the reference feeds the platform supports for <a href=\"#latency-arbitrage\">latency arbitrage<\/a> signal generation. CQG&#8217;s data is faster and more accurate than consumer aggregators, which is why it costs $50\u2013$200\/month rather than being free.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ctrader\">cTrader<\/h3>\n<p>A retail trading platform developed by Spotware, used by ECN-style forex brokers. cTrader has a more transparent order-book view than MT4\/MT5 and supports algorithmic trading via cBots. The platform connects to cTrader brokers through cTrader Open API and supports cTrader Raw price feeds as a reference source.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 6. SECTION D                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-d\">D<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"dealing-desk\">Dealing desk<\/h3>\n<p>A team or automated system at a <a href=\"#market-maker\">market maker<\/a> broker that decides whether to fill, requote, slip, or reject incoming client orders. A dealing desk is the opposite of straight-through execution \u2014 instead of routing your order to the market, the broker takes the other side and uses its desk to manage the resulting risk. Dealing desks are the principal reason arbitrage strategies fail on market-maker brokers: the desk recognizes arbitrage activity and filters it.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"drawdown\">Drawdown<\/h3>\n<p>The peak-to-trough decline in account equity, expressed as a percentage. Maximum drawdown is the worst single decline experienced; daily drawdown is the loss within one calendar day. Prop firms enforce both: typical rules cap daily drawdown at 4\u20135% and total drawdown at 8\u201310%. The platform&#8217;s risk dashboard enforces these limits automatically when configured.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"dxtrade\">DXTrade<\/h3>\n<p>A multi-asset trading platform developed by Devexperts, used by an increasing number of forex\/CFD brokers and prop firms (notably some FundedNext and TopstepFX accounts). DXTrade supports algorithmic execution through its WebSocket API, which the platform connects to via a dedicated module.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 7. SECTION E                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-e\">E<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"ecn\">ECN (Electronic Communication Network)<\/h3>\n<p>An execution model where the broker routes client orders into a network of liquidity providers \u2014 banks, hedge funds, other brokers \u2014 and lets them compete to fill the order at the best available price. ECN brokers do not take the other side of client trades; they earn a fixed commission per round-trip plus the raw spread the liquidity provider posts. ECN execution is the most arbitrage-friendly broker type, with fill rates typically 95\u201399% on a correctly configured setup.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"equinix\">Equinix<\/h3>\n<p>The colocation provider that operates the four datacenters where most forex and CFD brokers host their matching engines: LD4 (London), NY4 (New York), TY3 (Tokyo), FR5 (Frankfurt). When this site refers to &#8220;VPS in LD4&#8221; it means a server physically inside Equinix&#8217;s London Slough facility, with sub-millisecond network paths to brokers also colocated there.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"execution-latency\">Execution latency<\/h3>\n<p>The total time between the platform deciding to place an order and the broker confirming the fill. Execution latency is the sum of order-send latency (VPS to broker), broker processing time (matching, risk checks, dealing-desk intervention), and acknowledgement latency (broker back to VPS). Healthy round-trip execution latency on an ECN broker with colocated VPS is 5\u201330 ms; anything above 50 ms degrades arbitrage profitability.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ea\">Expert Advisor (EA)<\/h3>\n<p>An automated trading program written for MetaTrader 4 or MetaTrader 5. EAs run inside the platform, read price data, and place orders without manual intervention. The HFT Arbitrage Platform connects to MT4 and MT5 through dedicated EA modules rather than running as a free-standing terminal \u2014 this allows it to use the broker&#8217;s own MT4\/MT5 connection rather than relying on third-party APIs.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 8. SECTION F                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-f\">F<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"data-feed\">Feed (data feed)<\/h3>\n<p>The source of real-time price data the strategy compares against the broker&#8217;s quote stream to detect arbitrage opportunities. A useful reference feed must be faster and more accurate than the broker&#8217;s feed; otherwise there is no exploitable difference. Institutional feeds \u2014 <a href=\"#rithmic\">Rithmic<\/a>, <a href=\"#cqg\">CQG<\/a>, <a href=\"#integral\">Integral<\/a>, <a href=\"#lmax\">LMAX<\/a> \u2014 cost $50\u2013$300\/month. Consumer aggregator feeds are usually too slow or derived to produce viable signals.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"fill-rate\">Fill rate<\/h3>\n<p>The percentage of orders submitted by the platform that the broker fills at the expected price. Fill rate is the single most important execution metric for arbitrage, because a strategy with great signals but a 50% fill rate produces worse results than a mediocre strategy with a 98% fill rate. Fill rate above 90% indicates a healthy broker setup; below 70% indicates either a market-maker dealing desk, a non-colocated VPS, or an anti-arbitrage plugin on the broker side.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"fix-api\">FIX API<\/h3>\n<p>The Financial Information eXchange protocol \u2014 the industry-standard messaging format for exchanging trade information between brokers, exchanges, and trading systems. FIX API gives direct, low-latency access to a broker&#8217;s order book without going through a retail trading platform. Brokers offering FIX API are usually the most arbitrage-friendly because FIX is built for institutional speed; the trade-off is higher minimum capital ($10K\u2013$50K) and a more technical setup.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"forex\">Forex (FX)<\/h3>\n<p>Foreign exchange \u2014 the global market for trading one currency against another. Major pairs (EURUSD, USDJPY, GBPUSD, USDCHF) trade with the tightest spreads and highest liquidity, which is why most retail arbitrage strategies focus there. Cross pairs and exotic pairs have wider spreads, less liquidity, and frequently produce arbitrage signals that the broker can fade against \u2014 a trap to be aware of.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ftmo\">FTMO<\/h3>\n<p>One of the largest and most established prop trading firms, headquartered in Prague. FTMO offers funded accounts up to $400K based on a two-step evaluation. FTMO&#8217;s terms explicitly prohibit one-leg latency arbitrage but permit hedge arbitrage and 2-legs latency variant 3 if used responsibly within drawdown limits. FTMO is the reference standard most other prop firms benchmark against.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"fxblue\">FxBlue<\/h3>\n<p>An independent third-party trade-tracking and verification service used by traders and software vendors to publish auditable performance data. FxBlue connects directly to the broker account, reads the trade log, and publishes equity curve, drawdown, win rate, and trade-by-trade history publicly. Vendors that publish FxBlue links rather than PNG screenshots are providing verifiable data \u2014 this is a meaningful differentiator versus vendors that only show edited images.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 9. SECTION G                                         -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-g\">G<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"gold-arbitrage\">Gold arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>Arbitrage strategies executed on gold (XAUUSD) instead of currency pairs. Gold often produces wider arbitrage windows than majors because liquidity is fragmented across futures (COMEX), spot OTC, and the various retail CFD brokers, which means broker quotes can lag the reference market by tens of milliseconds. The trade-off is wider spreads \u2014 typical retail XAUUSD spread is 20\u201340 cents versus ~0.1 pip on EURUSD \u2014 so the captured difference must exceed both spread and commission to be profitable.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 10. SECTION H                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-h\">H<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"hedge-arbitrage\">Hedge arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>An arbitrage strategy that opens opposing positions on two different brokers simultaneously to lock in a small price difference between them. Because the position is hedged across brokers, the trader has no net market exposure \u2014 the profit comes from the price discrepancy rather than from market direction. Hedge arbitrage is the most flexible strategy: it works on a wider range of brokers than latency arbitrage, is permitted by most prop firms, and has the highest fill rates (90\u201399%). The trade-off is that it requires capital on both sides of the trade.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"hft\">HFT (High-Frequency Trading)<\/h3>\n<p>A category of algorithmic trading characterized by very short holding times (milliseconds to seconds), high trade frequency (hundreds to thousands of orders per day), and tight execution latency requirements. HFT is the umbrella that contains <a href=\"#latency-arbitrage\">latency arbitrage<\/a>, <a href=\"#statistical-arbitrage\">statistical arbitrage<\/a>, market-making, and short-window <a href=\"#news-trading\">news trading<\/a> strategies. HFT in retail forex is technically possible but execution-limited \u2014 the achievable speed on any retail broker is orders of magnitude slower than what institutional HFT desks operate at.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"holding-time\">Holding time<\/h3>\n<p>The duration between opening and closing a position. Pure latency arbitrage holds positions for milliseconds to a few seconds; hedge arbitrage holds for seconds to minutes; triangular arbitrage typically holds milliseconds. Brokers monitor average holding time as one of the cheapest signals for identifying arbitrage activity \u2014 accounts with consistent sub-second holding times are flagged for review. The platform&#8217;s anti-detection filter can enforce a minimum holding time to make the activity less obvious.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 11. SECTION I                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-i\">I<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"integral\">Integral OCX<\/h3>\n<p>Integral is a multi-bank FX liquidity provider that operates the OCX (Open Currency Exchange) \u2014 an institutional ECN aggregating prices from major banks. Integral OCX feed is one of the supported reference feeds for the platform&#8217;s latency-arbitrage strategies. The feed is used by tier-1 banks and large brokers, so it is faster than what most retail aggregators offer.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 12. SECTION L                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-l\">L<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"latency\">Latency<\/h3>\n<p>The time delay between cause and effect in a trading system: between a market price changing and the trader seeing it (feed latency), between the trader sending an order and the broker receiving it (network latency), between the broker accepting and confirming an order (execution latency). All three matter for arbitrage. Total latency is the sum, and total latency above ~30 ms eliminates most latency-arbitrage opportunities.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"latency-arbitrage\">Latency arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>An arbitrage strategy that exploits the time delay between a fast reference price feed and a slower broker quote. When the reference price moves up, the strategy buys at the broker&#8217;s stale (lower) price before the broker&#8217;s quote catches up; when the reference moves down, it sells before the broker updates. Latency arbitrage requires (a) a faster feed than the broker&#8217;s, (b) a colocated VPS, and (c) a broker with execution that doesn&#8217;t filter the strategy. The platform supports one-leg, 2-legs (variants 1, 2, 3), and 3-legs variants \u2014 see <a href=\"\/en\/latency-arbitrage-software\/\">Latency Arbitrage Software<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ld4\">LD4<\/h3>\n<p>Equinix&#8217;s London Slough datacenter, the primary forex\/CFD trading hub in Europe. Most ECN brokers serving European clients colocate their matching engines in LD4. A VPS physically inside LD4 has sub-1 ms network latency to those brokers, which is the precondition for latency arbitrage. &#8220;VPS in LD4&#8221; specifically means the LD4 facility, not &#8220;a VPS somewhere in London.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"leverage\">Leverage<\/h3>\n<p>The ratio of position size to account capital. Leverage of 1:100 means $1,000 of equity controls $100,000 of position. Leverage amplifies both profit and loss equally; arbitrage strategies typically use modest leverage (1:30\u20131:100) because the per-trade target is small and over-leveraging makes drawdown unsurvivable when fills slip. Prop firms cap leverage explicitly; retail accounts in regulated jurisdictions (EU, UK, Australia) have leverage capped by regulators at 1:30.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"lmax\">LMAX<\/h3>\n<p>LMAX Exchange is a London-based MTF (Multilateral Trading Facility) offering institutional FX, metals, and indices liquidity. LMAX runs an order-book model rather than dealing-desk, with last-look-free execution. The LMAX feed is one of the supported reference sources for the platform&#8217;s latency strategies and is widely regarded as the cleanest retail-accessible institutional feed.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"lock-arbitrage\">Lock arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>Another name for <a href=\"#hedge-arbitrage\">hedge arbitrage<\/a> \u2014 the strategy of opening locked opposing positions on two brokers to capture price differences between them. Some traders distinguish &#8220;lock&#8221; (positions held until both brokers&#8217; prices converge) from &#8220;hedge&#8221; (positions managed dynamically), but the terms are usually interchangeable.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 13. SECTION M                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-m\">M<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"market-maker\">Market maker<\/h3>\n<p>A broker execution model where the broker takes the opposite side of every client trade internally rather than routing to an external market. The broker profits from the bid-ask spread plus client losses; conversely the broker loses on client wins. Market makers manage their net exposure with a <a href=\"#dealing-desk\">dealing desk<\/a>, which makes them hostile to arbitrage activity. Most &#8220;zero commission&#8221; retail brokers are market makers.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"matchtrader\">MatchTrader<\/h3>\n<p>A trading platform developed by Match-Trade Technologies, gaining adoption among newer forex and CFD brokers and many prop firms. MatchTrader supports algorithmic execution through a dedicated API, which the HFT Arbitrage Platform connects to as one of its supported broker platforms.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"mt4\">MT4 (MetaTrader 4)<\/h3>\n<p>The most widely used retail forex trading platform globally, developed by MetaQuotes and released in 2005. MT4 is showing its age (legacy architecture, single-thread limitations) but remains dominant because of trader familiarity and the enormous library of EAs and indicators. The platform connects to MT4 through an Expert Advisor module, which uses the broker&#8217;s own MT4 connection for order routing.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"mt5\">MT5 (MetaTrader 5)<\/h3>\n<p>The successor to MT4, also from MetaQuotes, released in 2010. MT5 supports more instrument types (futures, equities, options), better backtesting, and a more modern architecture, but adoption has been slow because EA libraries are smaller and traders are reluctant to migrate. The platform supports MT5 as a separate module \u2014 code from MT4 EAs is not directly compatible.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 14. SECTION N                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-n\">N<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"news-trading\">News trading<\/h3>\n<p>A category of strategies that profit from price moves around scheduled economic news releases (NFP, FOMC, ECB, CPI). News-trading software either pre-positions before the release based on consensus expectations or reacts in the first milliseconds after the data hits the wire. Pure news arbitrage is a subset of latency arbitrage applied specifically to news windows \u2014 and is the broker activity most aggressively monitored, because news windows are when broker spread widening produces the largest arbitrage opportunities.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ninjatrader\">NinjaTrader<\/h3>\n<p>A trading platform popular in the US futures and CFD markets, developed by NinjaTrader Group. NinjaTrader supports automated strategies through its NinjaScript language and connects to brokers including NinjaTrader Brokerage, Continuum, and various futures-focused providers. The platform supports NinjaTrader as a connection target alongside MT4\/MT5\/cTrader\/DXTrade\/MatchTrader\/FIX.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ny4\">NY4<\/h3>\n<p>Equinix&#8217;s New York datacenter (Secaucus, NJ), the primary trading hub for North American FX and futures. Most US-facing forex brokers and many international ECNs colocate their matching engines in NY4. &#8220;VPS in NY4&#8221; specifically means a server inside the Equinix NY4 building, with sub-1 ms paths to brokers also colocated there. NY4 is the right datacenter for any strategy targeting US sessions or US-domiciled brokers.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 15. SECTION O                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-o\">O<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"one-leg-latency\">One-leg latency arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>The simplest latency-arbitrage strategy: a single position is opened on one broker when the reference feed shows a price difference versus the broker&#8217;s quote, and closed when the broker&#8217;s quote catches up. &#8220;One leg&#8221; because there is only one trade, not two simultaneous trades on different brokers. One-leg is the highest-edge strategy where it is permitted but is also the most aggressively detected \u2014 most prop firms ban it, and many retail brokers restrict it after a few weeks. See the <a href=\"\/product\/hft-arbitrage-platform-latency-arbitrage\/\">One Leg edition<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"order-book\">Order book<\/h3>\n<p>The list of all current buy and sell orders at each price level for an instrument. An ECN broker exposes the aggregated order book; a market maker shows only its internal best bid and ask. Order-book depth determines how much volume can be filled at a given price before slippage occurs, which is why high-volume arbitrage requires deep liquidity and why retail-grade brokers are not suitable for institutional-size flows.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 16. SECTION P                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-p\">P<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"pip\">Pip<\/h3>\n<p>The standard unit of price movement for most currency pairs \u2014 the fourth decimal place (0.0001) for pairs quoted in dollars-per-currency, the second decimal (0.01) for JPY pairs. A &#8220;pipette&#8221; is one tenth of a pip (the fifth decimal). Arbitrage profits per trade are usually measured in pipettes (0.1\u20130.5 pip captured, before spread and commission), which is why per-trade size and trade frequency both matter so much.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"profit-factor\">Profit factor<\/h3>\n<p>The ratio of gross profit to gross loss across a set of closed trades. A profit factor of 2.0 means two dollars earned for every dollar lost. Healthy arbitrage strategies typically run profit factors between 1.5 and 3.0; profit factors above 5.0 in published numbers usually indicate either cherry-picking or back-fitted parameters. The platform reports running profit factor in the risk dashboard.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"prop-firm\">Prop firm (proprietary trading firm)<\/h3>\n<p>A company that funds traders to trade the firm&#8217;s capital, sharing profits typically 70\/30 or 80\/20 in the trader&#8217;s favour after a paid evaluation phase. Major prop firms include FTMO, FundedNext, The5ers, and MyForexFunds. Prop firms enforce strict rules \u2014 daily drawdown caps, maximum drawdown caps, profit targets, lot-size restrictions, and explicit prohibitions on certain strategies including most one-leg latency arbitrage. See the <a href=\"\/en\/prop-firm-arbitrage-hft-software-funded-accounts\/\">Prop Firm Arbitrage<\/a> page for the current compatibility matrix.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 17. SECTION Q                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-q\">Q<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"quote\">Quote<\/h3>\n<p>A pair of bid and ask prices broadcast by a broker for a given instrument at a given moment. Quotes are updated continuously \u2014 a healthy retail broker pushes 5\u201350 quote updates per second on a major pair. Latency arbitrage works precisely when broker quote updates lag the reference price; the platform measures quote-update frequency as one of the diagnostics in the live dashboard.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 18. SECTION R                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-r\">R<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"requote\">Requote<\/h3>\n<p>A broker response in which an order is rejected and a new (worse) price is offered, requiring the trader to accept or cancel. Requotes are common on market-maker brokers during volatile moments and on any broker when a dealing desk decides not to fill at the requested price. A requote rate above 5% indicates either a hostile broker or an undersized account; healthy arbitrage setups see requote rates below 2%.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"rithmic\">Rithmic<\/h3>\n<p>An institutional market-data and order-routing provider, especially dominant in US futures (CME, CBOT, NYMEX). Rithmic data is among the fastest retail-accessible feeds for those markets and is one of the supported reference feeds for the platform&#8217;s latency-arbitrage strategies. Rithmic is paid (~$50\u2013$200\/month depending on the venues subscribed) but provides clean, unfiltered data that consumer aggregators cannot match.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"round-trip-latency\">Round-trip latency<\/h3>\n<p>The total time for an order to leave the trading server, reach the broker, be processed and confirmed, and the confirmation to return \u2014 measured in milliseconds. Round-trip latency below 5 ms is excellent (colocated VPS + ECN broker + FIX API); 5\u201330 ms is healthy retail; above 50 ms eliminates most latency-arbitrage opportunities. Round-trip latency is the single number that should be monitored constantly when running arbitrage.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 19. SECTION S                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-s\">S<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"session-filter\">Session filter<\/h3>\n<p>A platform setting that pauses trading during specific hours or events \u2014 typically high-impact news releases (NFP, FOMC, CPI), Sunday open, daily roll-over windows, and market close. Session filters serve two purposes: (1) avoiding unstable execution during widening spreads, and (2) anti-detection \u2014 concentrating trades during news windows is a strong broker signal for arbitrage activity, so spreading trades across sessions improves account survival.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"slippage\">Slippage<\/h3>\n<p>The difference between the price at which an order was sent and the price at which it filled. Positive slippage (filled at a better price) is rare in retail; negative slippage is common and is the second most important execution metric after fill rate. Average slippage of 0\u20130.3 pips is healthy on a quality ECN broker; 1+ pips of slippage indicates either market-maker dealing-desk intervention or insufficient liquidity at the requested size.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"spread\">Spread<\/h3>\n<p>See <a href=\"#bid-ask-spread\">bid-ask spread<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"statistical-arbitrage\">Statistical arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>A category of arbitrage that exploits statistical relationships between instruments rather than direct price differences \u2014 for example, mean reversion of correlated pairs, lead-lag relationships, or co-integrated baskets. Statistical arbitrage is a broader and more model-driven approach than latency arbitrage; it operates at lower frequency (seconds to minutes), is more robust to broker policies, and is what most institutional quant funds run. The HFT Arbitrage Platform focuses on direct-price arbitrage (latency, hedge, triangular) rather than stat-arb, which is a different software category.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"stp\">STP (Straight-Through Processing)<\/h3>\n<p>A broker execution model in which client orders are passed directly to a counterparty (a liquidity provider, another broker, or an exchange) without a dealing desk taking the other side. STP brokers profit from a small markup on the spread plus commission. Pure STP brokers are more arbitrage-friendly than market makers but less than ECNs; many retail brokers advertised as &#8220;STP&#8221; are in fact hybrid (STP for some volumes, market-making for others).<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 20. SECTION T                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-t\">T<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"tick\">Tick<\/h3>\n<p>A single price update \u2014 one new bid-ask pair from the broker or feed. A &#8220;tick&#8221; can be a tiny fractional move or no price move at all (only a timestamp update); the term refers to the data event, not the price magnitude. Ticks are the raw input to arbitrage strategies; tick-by-tick processing requires the platform to handle thousands of events per second per instrument.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"tick-data\">Tick data<\/h3>\n<p>Historical record of every <a href=\"#tick\">tick<\/a> that occurred for an instrument over a given period, used for backtesting at full resolution. Tick data is the most accurate form of market history but also the largest in storage terms (gigabytes per instrument per year). Useful arbitrage backtests require tick data with millisecond timestamps, not the lower-resolution OHLC bars most retail platforms ship by default.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"triangular-arbitrage\">Triangular arbitrage<\/h3>\n<p>An arbitrage strategy that exploits price discrepancies across three currency pairs that share a common base \u2014 for example, EURUSD, EURGBP, and GBPUSD. When the cross-rate implied by two pairs differs from the directly quoted third pair, the strategy executes all three legs simultaneously to capture the spread and return to a flat position. Triangular arbitrage requires tight spreads on all three legs and high execution speed; it works best on ECN accounts with deep liquidity.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"ty3\">TY3<\/h3>\n<p>Equinix&#8217;s Tokyo datacenter, the primary trading hub for Asian-session FX and CFD execution. Brokers serving Asian clients colocate their matching engines in TY3. A VPS in TY3 has sub-1 ms paths to those brokers, which is required for latency arbitrage during Asian session hours. The other major Asia-Pacific datacenter is HK1 (Hong Kong), used by a smaller subset of brokers.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 21. SECTION V                                        -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2 id=\"section-v\">V<\/h2>\n\n<h3 id=\"variant\">Variant (2-legs strategy)<\/h3>\n<p>Within the platform&#8217;s 2-legs latency arbitrage category, three implementation variants exist. Variant 1 is the classical formulation (open both legs simultaneously when divergence exceeds a threshold). Variant 2 reduces detection signature by introducing a short delay between leg openings. Variant 3 adds randomized timing and is the variant most compatible with prop firm rules. Each variant produces different fill rates, holding-time profiles, and account-survival characteristics; <a href=\"\/product\/hft-arbitrage-platform-all-arbitrage\/\">All Arbitrage Bundle<\/a> includes all three.<\/p>\n\n<h3 id=\"vps\">VPS (Virtual Private Server)<\/h3>\n<p>A remote server, typically rented from a hosting provider, that runs the trading software 24\/5 without requiring the trader&#8217;s own computer to be online. For arbitrage, the VPS must be located in the same datacenter as the broker (see <a href=\"#colocation\">colocation<\/a>), have at least 2 GB RAM, and a stable network path. A consumer-grade VPS at a generic data center adds tens of milliseconds of latency, which is enough to make latency arbitrage non-viable.<\/p>\n\n\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n<!-- 22. CTA + cross-links                                -->\n<!-- ================================================== -->\n\n<h2>Continue learning<\/h2>\n\n<p>This glossary is the reference layer. To understand how these terms fit together in a working setup:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n  <li><a href=\"\/en\/latency-arbitrage-software\/\">What is latency arbitrage software<\/a> \u2014 deep-dive on the strategy category<\/li>\n  <li><a href=\"\/en\/prop-firm-arbitrage-hft-software-funded-accounts\/\">Prop firm arbitrage<\/a> \u2014 what works on FTMO, FundedNext, The5ers, MyForexFunds<\/li>\n  <li><a href=\"\/en\/performance\/\">How HFT Arbitrage Platform performs<\/a> \u2014 fill rates, slippage, FxBlue verified accounts<\/li>\n  <li><a href=\"\/en\/editions\/\">Compare editions and pricing<\/a> \u2014 which strategies ship in which edition<\/li>\n  <li><a href=\"\/en\/how-to-set-up-hft-arbitrage-platform\/\">Setup guide<\/a> \u2014 7 steps from license to live<\/li>\n  <li><a href=\"\/en\/product-faq\/\">Full product FAQ<\/a> \u2014 19 questions across all topics<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<div style=\"background: #f8f9fa; padding: 24px; border-radius: 6px; margin: 32px 0; text-align: center; border: 1px solid #e0e0e0;\">\n  <p style=\"margin: 0 0 16px 0; font-size: 16px; color: #1a1a1a;\"><strong>Ready to test the platform on your own setup?<\/strong><\/p>\n  <a href=\"\/en\/product\/hft-arbitrage-platform-free\/\" style=\"display: inline-block; padding: 12px 24px; background: #0066cc; color: #ffffff; text-decoration: none; border-radius: 4px; font-weight: 600; margin: 4px;\">Start with $19 Shareware<\/a>\n  <a href=\"\/en\/editions\/\" style=\"display: inline-block; padding: 12px 24px; background: #ffffff; color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none; border-radius: 4px; font-weight: 600; margin: 4px; border: 2px solid #0066cc;\">Compare Editions<\/a>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n<!-- 23. JSON-LD \u2014 DefinedTermSet (the LLM-citation gold)           -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- DefinedTermSet is the most powerful schema type for glossary    -->\n<!-- pages because:                                                  -->\n<!-- 1. Google understands it as a structured definitional resource  -->\n<!-- 2. LLMs (ChatGPT\/Perplexity\/Claude\/Gemini) extract DefinedTerm  -->\n<!--    entries directly into knowledge bases for citation           -->\n<!-- 3. Each DefinedTerm gets its own URL via the @id (anchor)       -->\n<!-- 4. inDefinedTermSet links terms back to the parent set so       -->\n<!--    machines understand the relationship                         -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- We include 30 highest-priority terms in JSON-LD (don't need     -->\n<!-- all 55 \u2014 the schema marks the page as definitional and Google   -->\n<!-- can extract more from the H3+p structure).                      -->\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\">\n{\n  \"@context\": \"https:\/\/schema.org\",\n  \"@type\": \"DefinedTermSet\",\n  \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\",\n  \"name\": \"HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary\",\n  \"description\": \"Reference of 55 terms used across HFT, forex arbitrage, latency arbitrage, hedge arbitrage, triangular arbitrage, broker execution, and HFT trading infrastructure.\",\n  \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/\",\n  \"inLanguage\": \"en-US\",\n  \"hasDefinedTerm\": [\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"The simultaneous purchase and sale of the same or related assets to profit from a temporary price difference. In forex and CFD markets the price difference is usually fractions of a pip and arises from latency between brokers, mispricing across instruments, or temporary order-book imbalances.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#hft\",\n      \"name\": \"HFT (High-Frequency Trading)\",\n      \"description\": \"A category of algorithmic trading characterized by very short holding times (milliseconds to seconds), high trade frequency, and tight execution latency requirements. HFT contains latency arbitrage, statistical arbitrage, market-making, and short-window news trading as subsets.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"hft\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#hft\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#latency-arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Latency Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"An arbitrage strategy that exploits the time delay between a fast reference price feed and a slower broker quote. The strategy buys at the broker's stale price before the broker's quote catches up to the reference. Requires a faster feed than the broker's, a colocated VPS, and a broker that does not filter the strategy.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"latency-arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#latency-arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#hedge-arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Hedge Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"An arbitrage strategy that opens opposing positions on two different brokers simultaneously to lock in a small price difference between them. Because the position is hedged across brokers, the trader has no net market exposure \u2014 profit comes from the price discrepancy. The most flexible arbitrage strategy and is permitted by most prop firms.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"hedge-arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#hedge-arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#triangular-arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Triangular Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"An arbitrage strategy that exploits price discrepancies across three currency pairs sharing a common base \u2014 for example EURUSD, EURGBP, and GBPUSD. When the cross-rate implied by two pairs differs from the directly quoted third pair, the strategy executes all three legs simultaneously.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"triangular-arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#triangular-arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#one-leg-latency\",\n      \"name\": \"One-Leg Latency Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"The simplest latency-arbitrage strategy where a single position is opened on one broker when the reference feed shows a price difference versus the broker's quote, and closed when the broker's quote catches up. Highest-edge strategy where permitted but most aggressively detected; banned by most prop firms.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"one-leg-latency\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#one-leg-latency\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#lock-arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Lock Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"Another name for hedge arbitrage \u2014 the strategy of opening locked opposing positions on two brokers to capture price differences between them. The terms hedge arbitrage and lock arbitrage are usually interchangeable.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"lock-arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#lock-arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#gold-arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Gold Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"Arbitrage strategies executed on gold (XAUUSD) instead of currency pairs. Gold often produces wider arbitrage windows than majors because liquidity is fragmented across futures, spot OTC, and retail CFD brokers, which means broker quotes can lag the reference market by tens of milliseconds.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"gold-arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#gold-arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#statistical-arbitrage\",\n      \"name\": \"Statistical Arbitrage\",\n      \"description\": \"A category of arbitrage that exploits statistical relationships between instruments rather than direct price differences \u2014 mean reversion of correlated pairs, lead-lag relationships, or co-integrated baskets. More model-driven than latency arbitrage and operates at lower frequency.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"statistical-arbitrage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#statistical-arbitrage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ecn\",\n      \"name\": \"ECN (Electronic Communication Network)\",\n      \"description\": \"A broker execution model where the broker routes client orders into a network of liquidity providers and lets them compete to fill at the best available price. ECN brokers earn a fixed commission plus the raw spread. The most arbitrage-friendly broker type with fill rates of 95\u201399% on correctly configured setups.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"ecn\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ecn\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#stp\",\n      \"name\": \"STP (Straight-Through Processing)\",\n      \"description\": \"A broker execution model in which client orders are passed directly to a counterparty without a dealing desk taking the other side. STP brokers profit from a markup on the spread plus commission. More arbitrage-friendly than market makers but less than pure ECNs.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"stp\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#stp\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#market-maker\",\n      \"name\": \"Market Maker\",\n      \"description\": \"A broker execution model where the broker takes the opposite side of every client trade internally rather than routing externally. The broker profits from the spread plus client losses and uses a dealing desk to manage net exposure. Market makers are hostile to arbitrage activity.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"market-maker\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#market-maker\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#dealing-desk\",\n      \"name\": \"Dealing Desk\",\n      \"description\": \"A team or automated system at a market maker broker that decides whether to fill, requote, slip, or reject incoming client orders. Dealing desks are the principal reason arbitrage strategies fail on market-maker brokers \u2014 the desk recognizes arbitrage activity and filters it.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"dealing-desk\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#dealing-desk\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#fill-rate\",\n      \"name\": \"Fill Rate\",\n      \"description\": \"The percentage of orders submitted by the platform that the broker fills at the expected price. Fill rate is the single most important execution metric for arbitrage. Above 90% indicates a healthy broker setup; below 70% indicates either a market-maker dealing desk, a non-colocated VPS, or an anti-arbitrage plugin.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"fill-rate\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#fill-rate\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#slippage\",\n      \"name\": \"Slippage\",\n      \"description\": \"The difference between the price at which an order was sent and the price at which it filled. Average slippage of 0\u20130.3 pips is healthy on a quality ECN broker; 1+ pips of slippage indicates either market-maker dealing-desk intervention or insufficient liquidity at the requested size.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"slippage\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#slippage\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#latency\",\n      \"name\": \"Latency\",\n      \"description\": \"The time delay between cause and effect in a trading system: between a market price changing and the trader seeing it, between sending an order and the broker receiving it, between broker accepting and confirming. Total latency above ~30 ms eliminates most latency-arbitrage opportunities.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"latency\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#latency\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#round-trip-latency\",\n      \"name\": \"Round-Trip Latency\",\n      \"description\": \"The total time for an order to leave the trading server, reach the broker, be processed and confirmed, and the confirmation to return \u2014 measured in milliseconds. Below 5 ms is excellent (colocated VPS plus ECN broker plus FIX API); 5\u201330 ms is healthy retail; above 50 ms eliminates most latency-arbitrage opportunities.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"round-trip-latency\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#round-trip-latency\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#colocation\",\n      \"name\": \"Colocation\",\n      \"description\": \"The practice of placing the trading VPS in the same physical datacenter as the broker's matching engine. Colocation reduces network round-trip time from tens or hundreds of milliseconds to fractions of a millisecond. For latency arbitrage this is not optional.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"colocation\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#colocation\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#vps\",\n      \"name\": \"VPS (Virtual Private Server)\",\n      \"description\": \"A remote server that runs the trading software 24\/5. For arbitrage, the VPS must be located in the same datacenter as the broker, have at least 2 GB RAM, and a stable network path. Consumer-grade VPS at generic data centers add tens of milliseconds of latency.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"vps\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#vps\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ld4\",\n      \"name\": \"LD4\",\n      \"description\": \"Equinix's London Slough datacenter, the primary forex\/CFD trading hub in Europe. Most ECN brokers serving European clients colocate their matching engines in LD4. A VPS physically inside LD4 has sub-1 ms network latency to those brokers.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"ld4\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ld4\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ny4\",\n      \"name\": \"NY4\",\n      \"description\": \"Equinix's New York datacenter (Secaucus, NJ), the primary trading hub for North American FX and futures. Most US-facing forex brokers and many international ECNs colocate matching engines in NY4. The right datacenter for strategies targeting US sessions or US-domiciled brokers.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"ny4\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ny4\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ty3\",\n      \"name\": \"TY3\",\n      \"description\": \"Equinix's Tokyo datacenter, the primary trading hub for Asian-session FX and CFD execution. Brokers serving Asian clients colocate matching engines in TY3. Required for latency arbitrage during Asian session hours.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"ty3\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ty3\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#fix-api\",\n      \"name\": \"FIX API\",\n      \"description\": \"The Financial Information eXchange protocol \u2014 the industry-standard messaging format for exchanging trade information between brokers, exchanges, and trading systems. FIX API gives direct, low-latency access to a broker's order book without going through a retail trading platform.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"fix-api\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#fix-api\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#mt4\",\n      \"name\": \"MT4 (MetaTrader 4)\",\n      \"description\": \"The most widely used retail forex trading platform globally, developed by MetaQuotes and released in 2005. MT4 has legacy architecture and single-thread limitations but remains dominant because of trader familiarity and the EA library. The HFT Arbitrage Platform connects to MT4 through an Expert Advisor module.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"mt4\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#mt4\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#mt5\",\n      \"name\": \"MT5 (MetaTrader 5)\",\n      \"description\": \"The successor to MT4 from MetaQuotes, released in 2010. Supports more instrument types, better backtesting, and more modern architecture. The platform supports MT5 as a separate module \u2014 code from MT4 EAs is not directly compatible.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"mt5\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#mt5\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ctrader\",\n      \"name\": \"cTrader\",\n      \"description\": \"A retail trading platform developed by Spotware, used by ECN-style forex brokers. cTrader has a more transparent order-book view than MT4\/MT5 and supports algorithmic trading via cBots. Connects through cTrader Open API and supports cTrader Raw price feeds as a reference source.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"ctrader\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ctrader\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#prop-firm\",\n      \"name\": \"Prop Firm (Proprietary Trading Firm)\",\n      \"description\": \"A company that funds traders to trade the firm's capital, sharing profits typically 70\/30 or 80\/20 in the trader's favour after a paid evaluation. Major prop firms include FTMO, FundedNext, The5ers, MyForexFunds. Prop firms enforce strict rules including drawdown caps and explicit prohibitions on most one-leg latency arbitrage.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"prop-firm\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#prop-firm\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ftmo\",\n      \"name\": \"FTMO\",\n      \"description\": \"One of the largest and most established prop trading firms, headquartered in Prague. Offers funded accounts up to $400K based on a two-step evaluation. Terms explicitly prohibit one-leg latency arbitrage but permit hedge arbitrage and 2-legs latency variant 3 within drawdown limits.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"ftmo\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#ftmo\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#fxblue\",\n      \"name\": \"FxBlue\",\n      \"description\": \"An independent third-party trade-tracking and verification service used to publish auditable performance data. FxBlue connects directly to the broker account, reads the trade log, and publishes equity curve, drawdown, win rate, and trade-by-trade history publicly.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"fxblue\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#fxblue\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"DefinedTerm\",\n      \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#anti-detection-filter\",\n      \"name\": \"Anti-Detection Filter\",\n      \"description\": \"A software setting that disguises arbitrage activity from broker monitoring. Typical filters include randomized lot sizing, enforced minimum holding times, and session diversification. Extends account survival on tolerant brokers from days to months but cannot bypass brokers that explicitly prohibit arbitrage.\",\n      \"termCode\": \"anti-detection-filter\",\n      \"url\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#anti-detection-filter\",\n      \"inDefinedTermSet\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#termset\"\n    }\n  ]\n}\n<\/script>\n\n\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n<!-- 24. JSON-LD \u2014 BreadcrumbList                                   -->\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\">\n{\n  \"@context\": \"https:\/\/schema.org\",\n  \"@type\": \"BreadcrumbList\",\n  \"@id\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/#breadcrumb\",\n  \"itemListElement\": [\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"ListItem\",\n      \"position\": 1,\n      \"name\": \"Home\",\n      \"item\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/\"\n    },\n    {\n      \"@type\": \"ListItem\",\n      \"position\": 2,\n      \"name\": \"Glossary\",\n      \"item\": \"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/en\/glossary\/\"\n    }\n  ]\n}\n<\/script>\n\n\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n<!-- END OF PAGE                                                    -->\n<!--                                                                 -->\n<!-- POST-PUBLISH CHECKLIST:                                         -->\n<!-- [ ] Page published at \/en\/glossary\/                             -->\n<!-- [ ] Yoast title: \"HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014            -->\n<!--     55 Key Terms Defined\" (58 chars)                           -->\n<!-- [ ] Yoast meta description pasted (155 chars)                   -->\n<!-- [ ] Focus keyphrase: \"HFT arbitrage glossary\"                   -->\n<!-- [ ] Validate JSON-LD at search.google.com\/test\/rich-results     -->\n<!--     \u2014 DefinedTermSet should appear with no errors               -->\n<!-- [ ] Submit URL to Google Search Console                         -->\n<!-- [ ] Add link to glossary from main navigation                   -->\n<!--     (Resources\/Education submenu, or footer)                    -->\n<!-- [ ] On every existing page, link the FIRST mention of each      -->\n<!--     glossary term to its anchor \u2014 example:                      -->\n<!--     <a href=\"\/en\/glossary\/#latency-arbitrage\">latency           -->\n<!--     arbitrage<\/a>                                                -->\n<!-- [ ] Add Helpie FAQ entry: \"Where can I look up these trading    -->\n<!--     terms?\" with answer linking to glossary                     -->\n<!-- [ ] Purge site cache                                            -->\n<!-- ============================================================= -->\n\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>About this glossary A reference of 55 terms used across HFT, forex arbitrage, latency arbitrage, hedge arbitrage, triangular arbitrage, broker execution, and the infrastructure (VPS, datacenters, feeds) that supports HFT trading. Definitions are written for traders, not academics \u2014 each entry tells you what the term means and why it matters when running an arbitrage [&#8230;]<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"btn btn-secondary conversions-read-more-link\" href=\"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/\">Read More&#8230;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"page-templates\/fullwidthpage.php","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-3975","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Title: HFT &amp; Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation, FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"es_ES\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Title: HFT &amp; Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation, FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"HFT Arbitrage Platform -Arbitrage Software for Forex &amp; Cryptocurrencies Markets\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2026-04-30T20:18:23+00:00\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Tiempo de lectura\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"19 minutos\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\\\/\\\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\\\/\",\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\\\/\",\"name\":\"Title: HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"2026-04-30T20:18:20+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2026-04-30T20:18:23+00:00\",\"description\":\"Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation, FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.\",\"breadcrumb\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\\\/#breadcrumb\"},\"inLanguage\":\"es\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\\\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"BreadcrumbList\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\\\/#breadcrumb\",\"itemListElement\":[{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":1,\"name\":\"Home\",\"item\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/\"},{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":2,\"name\":\"HFT &amp; Arbitrage Trading Glossary\"}]},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/\",\"name\":\"HFT Arbitrage Platform -Arbitrage Software for Forex &amp; Cryptocurrencies Markets\",\"description\":\"Multi-platforms and Multi-Strategies HFT Arbitrage Bot\",\"publisher\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/#organization\"},\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":{\"@type\":\"PropertyValueSpecification\",\"valueRequired\":true,\"valueName\":\"search_term_string\"}}],\"inLanguage\":\"es\"},{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/#organization\",\"name\":\"HFT Arbitrage Platform -Arbitrage Software for Forex &amp; Cryptocurrencies Markets\",\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/\",\"logo\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"es\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/#\\\/schema\\\/logo\\\/image\\\/\",\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/i0.wp.com\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2022\\\/06\\\/cropped-hft-arbitrage-platfromLogo.png?fit=500%2C93&ssl=1\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\\\/\\\/i0.wp.com\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/wp-content\\\/uploads\\\/2022\\\/06\\\/cropped-hft-arbitrage-platfromLogo.png?fit=500%2C93&ssl=1\",\"width\":500,\"height\":93,\"caption\":\"HFT Arbitrage Platform -Arbitrage Software for Forex &amp; Cryptocurrencies Markets\"},\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\\\/#\\\/schema\\\/logo\\\/image\\\/\"}}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"Title: HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined","description":"Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation, FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/","og_locale":"es_ES","og_type":"article","og_title":"Title: HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined","og_description":"Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation, FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.","og_url":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/","og_site_name":"HFT Arbitrage Platform -Arbitrage Software for Forex &amp; Cryptocurrencies Markets","article_modified_time":"2026-04-30T20:18:23+00:00","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Tiempo de lectura":"19 minutos"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/","url":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/","name":"Title: HFT & Arbitrage Trading Glossary \u2014 55 Key Terms Defined","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/#website"},"datePublished":"2026-04-30T20:18:20+00:00","dateModified":"2026-04-30T20:18:23+00:00","description":"Plain-English definitions of 55 essential HFT and arbitrage terms \u2014 from latency arbitrage and ECN to LD4 colocation, FIX API, fill rate, and prop firm rules.","breadcrumb":{"@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/#breadcrumb"},"inLanguage":"es","potentialAction":[{"@type":"ReadAction","target":["https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/"]}]},{"@type":"BreadcrumbList","@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/hft-arbitrage-trading-glossary\/#breadcrumb","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"Home","item":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"HFT &amp; Arbitrage Trading Glossary"}]},{"@type":"WebSite","@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/#website","url":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/","name":"Plataforma de Arbitraje HFT - Software de Arbitraje para Mercados de Divisas y Criptomonedas","description":"Bot de arbitraje HFT multiplataforma y multiestrategia","publisher":{"@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/#organization"},"potentialAction":[{"@type":"SearchAction","target":{"@type":"EntryPoint","urlTemplate":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/?s={search_term_string}"},"query-input":{"@type":"PropertyValueSpecification","valueRequired":true,"valueName":"search_term_string"}}],"inLanguage":"es"},{"@type":"Organization","@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/#organization","name":"Plataforma de Arbitraje HFT - Software de Arbitraje para Mercados de Divisas y Criptomonedas","url":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"es","@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/#\/schema\/logo\/image\/","url":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/cropped-hft-arbitrage-platfromLogo.png?fit=500%2C93&ssl=1","contentUrl":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/cropped-hft-arbitrage-platfromLogo.png?fit=500%2C93&ssl=1","width":500,"height":93,"caption":"HFT Arbitrage Platform -Arbitrage Software for Forex &amp; Cryptocurrencies Markets"},"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/#\/schema\/logo\/image\/"}}]}},"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/3975","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3975"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/3975\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3977,"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/3975\/revisions\/3977"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/hftarbitrageplatform.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3975"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}