Empirical Analysis of Indirect Internal Conversions in Cryptocurrency Exchanges
Algorithmic trading is well studied in traditional financial markets. However, it has received less attention in centralized cryptocurrency exchanges. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) attributed the 2010 flash crash, one of the most turbulent periods in the history of financial markets that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average lose 9% of its value within minutes, to automated order "spoofing" algorithms. In this paper, we build a set of methodologies to characterize and empirically measure different algorithmic trading strategies in Binance, a large centralized cryptocurrency exchange, using a complete data set of historical trades. We find that a sub-strategy of triangular arbitrage is widespread, where bots convert between two coins through an intermediary coin, and obtain a favorable exchange rate compared to the direct one. We measure the profitability of this strategy, characterize its risks, and outline two strategies that algorithmic trading bots use to mitigate their losses. We find that this strategy yields an exchange ratio that is 0.144%, or 14.4 basis points (bps) better than the direct exchange ratio. 2.71% of all trades on Binance are attributable to this strategy.
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