Index arbitrage

Index arbitrage is a subset of statistical arbitrage focusing on index components.

The idea is that an index (such as S&P 500 or Russell 2000) is made up of several components (in the example, 500 large US stocks picked by S&P to represent the US market) that influence the index price in a different manner.

For instance, there are leaders (components that react first to market impact) and laggers (the opposite). As the index is the weighted sum of all components, identifying leaders and laggers can provide a proprietary trader with the opportunity to take positions in these and make money if he/she believes the laggers will eventually rally on the leaders. The challenge being of course to correctly identify these, and to have the technology to act in the marketplace before the price correction takes place.

Other types of index arbitrage include basis trading, the arbitrage between a current index value (synthetically replicated) and that of its future.

See also