Learn what arbitrage means, why true arbitrage is rare in practice, and how traders use pricing gaps across markets, instruments, or currencies.
Arbitrage is the attempt to profit from a pricing discrepancy between two economically related positions.
The classic form of arbitrage involves buying an asset where it is cheap and selling the same or closely equivalent asset where it is expensive, with little or no net market exposure.
In its simplest form:
If the two prices should logically be aligned but are not, an arbitrageur tries to lock in the gap before it disappears.
Arbitrage helps markets become more efficient.
When traders aggressively exploit price differences:
That is why arbitrage is closely tied to market efficiency and to the structure of modern trading systems.
Textbook arbitrage is often described as nearly risk free.
In practice, real-world arbitrage can still face:
So the clean theory of “free money” is usually more complicated in actual markets.
Examples include:
The common thread is not the asset class. It is the attempt to exploit mispricing rather than make a simple directional bet.
Speculation usually depends on being right about the future direction of a market.
Arbitrage usually depends on identifying a present inconsistency in pricing and constructing trades that benefit when that inconsistency closes.
That is why arbitrage is often seen as more relative-value oriented than ordinary directional trading.
Suppose a stock trades at $50.00 on one venue and effectively at $50.20 on another after costs.
If a trader can buy at $50.00 and sell at $50.20 quickly enough, the price gap may produce an arbitrage profit.
But if execution is delayed, the gap can vanish before the trader locks it in.
That timing reality is why speed and infrastructure matter so much.