These platforms were originally created to allow big trades (often millions of dollars in value) to happen quietly, reducing the risk of price impact — where the act of placing a large order causes the market to move unfavorably.
When a large investor — like a pension fund, mutual fund, or hedge fund — wants to make a sizable trade, executing it on a public exchange could move the market against them. In a dark pool, that order is matched privately with a counterparty, typically through an algorithm, without being exposed to the public order book.
For example, if a firm wants to sell 500,000 shares of a stock, doing so on the open market might trigger a selloff. In a dark pool, they may be able to execute that trade in full or in parts without alerting other traders.
Dark pools are legal and regulated in the U.S. by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), but they operate under less stringent transparency rules than public exchanges.
Key points:
While dark pools serve a legitimate purpose, critics argue that they can fragment markets and reduce the transparency that public exchanges offer.