Arbitrage (ARB) is the financial wizard's equivalent of a “free lunch.” It involves simultaneously buying and selling an identical or similar asset in different markets to exploit a temporary price difference. The goal is to lock in a small, but virtually risk-free profit. Imagine finding a rare collector's coin for sale online for €100 while knowing a buyer in another forum is willing to pay €105 for it that very instant. If you could buy and sell it at the exact same moment, that €5 difference (minus any transaction costs) would be your arbitrage profit. In the real world of finance, these transactions involve securities, currencies, or derivatives and are executed in fractions of a second by powerful computers. True, pure arbitrage opportunities are like shooting stars—they appear without warning and vanish in a flash, as traders, or “arbitrageurs,” quickly swoop in and eliminate the price discrepancy.
At its heart, arbitrage is a force for market efficiency. It's rooted in a principle called the law of one price, which states that in an efficient market, an asset should have the same price everywhere. When a price difference, or “inefficiency,” appears, arbitrageurs act as the market's cleanup crew, buying the cheaper version and selling the more expensive one until their prices converge.
While the concept is simple, the execution can be complex. Not all arbitrage is created equal, and most forms carry some level of risk.
So, where does the everyday value investing enthusiast fit into this picture? At first glance, arbitrage and value investing seem like they live on different planets.
A pure arbitrageur doesn't care if a company sells sugar water or software; they only care that its stock is mispriced for a few milliseconds. A value investor, in the tradition of Benjamin Graham or Warren Buffett, cares deeply about the business's long-term prospects, its management, and its competitive advantages.
However, if you squint a little, you can see value investing as its own special form of arbitrage. A value investor is attempting to “arbitrage” the vast gap between a company's fluctuating market price (Mr. Market's manic-depressive quote) and its long-term, underlying business value. When you buy a wonderful business for $60 that your careful research suggests is worth $100, you are exploiting a massive pricing inefficiency. The key differences are:
For the ordinary investor, trying to engage in pure arbitrage is a fool's errand. It's a high-speed, high-stakes game played by institutional giants. However, the spirit of arbitrage—the relentless hunt for mispricing—is the very soul of value investing. Instead of looking for a one-cent difference between two exchanges, the value investor looks for the fifty-cent difference between price and value. That's an arbitrage opportunity worth waiting for.