Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Revelations and Reviews April 26-28, 2013 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)THAT'S A TOTALLY INACCURATE TITLE...IT IS WELL-KNOWN AND DOCUMENTED THAT THE MARKETS ARE BROKEN. EVEN SOME SERIOUS PEOPLE ADMIT TO IT.
WHAT THE TWEET DID WAS EXPOSE HOW BADLY THE MARKETS ARE BROKEN, AND HOW LITTLE ANYONE IN A POSITION TO ACT CARES ABOUT THAT BROKENNESS.
WATCH FOR THE REGULATORY RESPONSE...IF YOU ARE STUCK IN PRISON WITH NOTHING ELSE TO DO....
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/04/associated-press-hacked-tweet-high-speed-trading
When a phony Associated Press tweet reported explosions in the White House, Wall Street's computers reacted as if it were real...In the January/February issue of Mother Jones, I wrote about Wall Street's embrace of high-speed computer programs that execute thousands of trades per second. These algorithms, some of which can teach themselves and operate almost entirely without human interference, present a new and challenging danger to the stability of global financial markets because they work in timeframes that people can't begin to perceive. By the time an actual person realizes something is wrong, it might already be too late to fix the problem. The concern isn't that one firm's high-speed trading program will make a mistake, but rather that a bunch of them will make the same mistake at once, launching a chain reaction that could undermine the financial system.
On Tuesday, the world saw exactly how fast these sorts of programs can respond to bad news. Many high-speed trading algorithms are designed to read headlines and trade based on that information before human traders can react. So when the Associated Press Twitter account tweeted at 1:07 p.m. Eastern time on Tuesday that two explosions were reported in the White House and President Barack Obama was injured, the market fell immediately...The S&P 500 fell nearly 1 percent, wiping out more than $130 billion in shareholder value in minutes. As the market plunged, quotesoffers to buy or sellsurged. But the vast majority of those offers were withdrawn before anyone could trade on them. Liquiditya term that refers to the ease with which traders can buy or sell a financial productdried up, suggesting that today's highly liquid markets are in fact very fragile.
...The S&P 500 fell nearly 1 percent, wiping out more than $130 billion in shareholder value in minutes. As the market plunged, quotesoffers to buy or sellsurged. But the vast majority of those offers were withdrawn before anyone could trade on them. Liquiditya term that refers to the ease with which traders can buy or sell a financial productdried up, suggesting that today's highly liquid markets are in fact very fragile.
Liquidity in the S&P 500 E-Mini, the most important stock futures contract, has "never dropped that quickly and that far that fastever," says Eric Hunsader, who runs NANEX, a firm that provides software and services to high-speed traders. "The faster that we let trading go, the faster liquidity will disappear," he adds. For ordinary traders, the sheer speed with which high-speed traders pulled out of the market in the wake of the phony AP tweet suggests that "the investor is a spectator not a participant." He continues, "There is no way [the average investor is] going to be able to get in and take advantage of something like this. The prices you see on CNBC might as well be a newspaper at the end of the day."
...Within about five minutesafter it became clear that the AP tweet was fake, the Twitter account was suspended, AP journalists tweeted that the tweet was false, and a group of Syrian activists claimed responsibilitythe market recovered its losses. But the incident suggests that someone with the ability to hack high-profile Twitter accounts could wreak havoc on US and world financial markets, and make a lot of money doing so. If you knew that a hacked tweet was about to panic the markets, you could short the market for that period of time, or buy low when stocks hit bottom, knowing they'd recover when the news proved to be false. In fact, the fake tweet made regulators suspicious that something like that might have happened: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is investigating trading in 28 futures contracts during the tweet crash to make sure everything was above-board and no one had inside information. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Securities and Exchange Commission are also probing the incident....
MORE FEEL-GOOD REASSURANCE AT LINK