Arbitrage in a sentence as a noun

Car arbitrage is a hack - checking a car's title is minimal effort.

In order to arbitrage interest rates, you have to have whatever you buy return more than what you have to pay for the money.

This highlights the fact that Uber and Lyft are not disrupting so much as exploiting regulatory arbitrage.

Robot 1 notices Robot 2's listing, doesn't know or care that Robot 2 is another arbitrage trader, and reprices its listing for the book to $12.

Supap Kirtsaeng took advantage of discounted pricing that Wiley offered students in poorer countries to arbitrage prices.

Nobody will figure out how to arbitrage that..."I've heard great things about I/O, but the device giveaways seem to always turn registration into a circus...

You could execute guaranteed-to-profit arbitrage strategies between any two markets if you were willing to build out the network.

When labor overshares and capital doesn't change what it does, who should one expect to win?As far as I'm concerned, I don't have an ethical problem with social proof arbitrage.

Arbitrage in a sentence as a verb

If you get something with a higher rate of return, and you use borrowed money to buy it, then that's really investing on margin and not really something you could call "arbitrage".

It probably doesn't have it in stock, but it knows where it can buy it for, say, $9, drop-ship it to the customer without ever seeing the acutal product, and make a buck on the arbitrage.

Another way to do arbitrage is to build two reservoirs and pump water to the higher one at night when power is cheap and then generate hydro power during the day when power is expensive [1].

IT is actually possible to sell power in the day-ahead market and sell it in the real-time market without owning any generation capacity and do arbitrage.

Options market makers need rates and collateral markets to provide liquidity and correct market aberrations through arbitrage.

Second, we show that this correlation breakdown creates frequent technical arbitrage opportunities, available to whomever is fastest, which in turn creates an arms race to exploit such opportunities.

Airline ticket pricing is not a good general example: The airlines get away with arcane pricing in part because they have successfully outlawed arbitrage by prohibiting the resale or transfer of tickets away from the original buyer, in the name of "security".I'm dubious that this practice is going to work so well for, say, socks.

Arbitrage definitions

noun

a kind of hedged investment meant to capture slight differences in price; when there is a difference in the price of something on two different markets the arbitrageur simultaneously buys at the lower price and sells at the higher price

verb

practice arbitrage, as in the stock market