Market Making without Regret
This addresses the challenge of optimizing market maker strategies in financial markets, offering theoretical insights but is incremental as it builds on existing regret minimization frameworks.
The paper tackles the problem of sequential market making where a market maker sets bid and ask prices to traders with private valuations, aiming to minimize regret relative to the best fixed price pair under various assumptions on market prices and valuations. It provides upper bounds revealing connections to first-price auctions and dynamic pricing, and a lower bound for the i.i.d. case with Lipschitz distributions.
We consider a sequential decision-making setting where, at every round $t$, a market maker posts a bid price $B_t$ and an ask price $A_t$ to an incoming trader (the taker) with a private valuation for one unit of some asset. If the trader's valuation is lower than the bid price, or higher than the ask price, then a trade (sell or buy) occurs. If a trade happens at round $t$, then letting $M_t$ be the market price (observed only at the end of round $t$), the maker's utility is $M_t - B_t$ if the maker bought the asset, and $A_t - M_t$ if they sold it. We characterize the maker's regret with respect to the best fixed choice of bid and ask pairs under a variety of assumptions (adversarial, i.i.d., and their variants) on the sequence of market prices and valuations. Our upper bound analysis unveils an intriguing connection relating market making to first-price auctions and dynamic pricing. Our main technical contribution is a lower bound for the i.i.d. case with Lipschitz distributions and independence between prices and valuations. The difficulty in the analysis stems from the unique structure of the reward and feedback functions, allowing an algorithm to acquire information by graduating the "cost of exploration" in an arbitrary way.