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Norwegian Day Traders Convicted For Manipulating Computer Trading System

An anonymous reader submits news of the conviction of two Norwegian day traders, Svend Egil Larsen and Peder Veiby, who were on Wednesday fined and given suspended sentences (Norwegian court, Norwegian document) for cleverly working out — and cashing in on — the way the computerized trading system of Interactive Brokers subsidiary Timber Hill would respond to certain trades. They used the system's predictable responses to manipulate the value of low-priced stocks. The pair have gotten some sympathetic reactions from around the world, and promise to appeal.

22 of 299 comments (clear)

  1. Algorithmic trading? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So these guys figured out how to second-guess somebody's trading algorithm. How in hell is that a crime?

    Many mechanical trading algorithms are also trying to second-guess the actions of other market participants in order to make a profit. These guys just did the same, apparently in cases where the trades made by a particular mechanical algorithm would be big enough to move the market themselves.

    Mechanical trading algorithms are either fair game, or preferably, should be illegal. If mechanical trading algorithms are legal, then what these men did should definitely not be illegal.

    --
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    1. Re:Algorithmic trading? by hkmwbz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I read about this case a while ago. It seems amazing that the people who are actively manipulating the market with thousands of automatic trades every minute are being protected, while the little guy who figured out how to win over the machines gets convicted. The idiocy of allowing robot traders to roam free should be very obvious after it caused the market to take a steep dive for no reason. But no, robot trading is being encouraged! Money talks.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    2. Re:Algorithmic trading? by Y0tsuya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The stock market is a casino. The banks and hedge funds is "House". As far as the government is concerned it's OK for banks and hedge funds to manipulate, but not for the little guys. If you screw with the house they wipe the floor with you.

    3. Re:Algorithmic trading? by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That is exactly what I came here to say. I can be grudgingly convinced to accept auto-trading, after all it only takes a small portion from me since I make longer term trades, but when they convict people for this.......my support is gone. Where do I sign the petition to get rid of high speed trading? This is garbage.

      --
      Qxe4
    4. Re:Algorithmic trading? by ultranova · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It seems amazing that the people who are actively manipulating the market with thousands of automatic trades every minute are being protected, while the little guy who figured out how to win over the machines gets convicted.

      Not really. It's just nobility closing their ranks and watching each other's backs, least a peon would become their equal.

      You didn't really think that the law was same to all, now did you?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    5. Re:Algorithmic trading? by Paul+Rose · · Score: 4, Interesting

      >>So these guys figured out how to second-guess somebody's trading algorithm. How in hell is that a crime?

      Not quite.

      If they had figured out how to predict where somebody else's algorithm was trading, and trade against it for profit, they would not be in trouble.

      What they did was figure out how somebody else's algorithm would react to stimulus, then entered created that stimulus, then traded against the result.

      They entered orders that had no intention of getting a trade (and indeed would have been unhappy to have traded because they were unnaturally high bids or low offers). These orders gave the impression to both people and software that the market had changed for real. The algorithm followed the "fake" data and made too high of a bid or too low of an offer. They then cancelled their "fake" orders and instantly entered real orders on the opposite side to hit the algorithm.

      This has been going in (sans computers) for decades, and is illegal in most regulated markets.

      It is similar to the idea of leaking fake news and trading against the move and then making a profit when people figured out it was fake.

  2. Re:It's still market manipulation by Omnifarious · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All stock trading changes the market. Does the system they beat have algorithms for anticipating the results of its own trades on the market? If so, why aren't the owners of the system being brought up on charges for manipulating the market?

    No, the reason these guys were brought up on charges was because they aren't a big investment house, and beat a big investment house at its own game, not because they did something that's different from what any stock trader does.

  3. In the USA by srussia · · Score: 4, Funny

    FTFA:In yesterday's conviction of the Norweigan traders, the prosecution said the pair had given "false and misleading signals about supply, demand and prices"

    In the US the official body that does this is called the Working Group on Financial Markets.

    They hate it when other people cut in on their action.

    --
    Set your phasers on "funky"!
  4. I know these guys by ebonum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know the guys at Timber Hill from before IB bought them. They are what one would calls pros. It is hard to think of them as victims. They have all the money hardware and brains a company could want. Actually, I would call Timber Hill fairly predatory. These guys were printing big money through high speed algo trading before anyone knew what that was back in 2000.

    Knowing them, I doubt they are happy that their name is in the news. Years ago, they truly didn't want any attention. The less the outside world knew, the better.

    The big issue is: this is essentially what all the high speed traders are doing. The line here is fuzzy. However, I fear these Norwegian fellows are being held to a higher standard than people who are more powerful and more established.

  5. Re:It's still market manipulation by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most stock traders aren't targeting one other stock trader with a series of transactions, they manipulated that robot into giving them arbitrage. However, I thought their defense was quite strong in that a trade is a fact and can never be untrue as such. Poorly interpreting that trade makes you a bad investor. Repeatedly interpreting trades poorly makes you a bad investor with no learning ability. If that was illegal, there'd be lawsuits flying all over the stock market.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  6. "genuinely based on real belief in the value" by tlambert · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But here's the thing, their behavior wasn't honest or genuinely based on real belief in the value of the stocks.

    So... the traders didn't act genuinely based a real belief in the stocks. Unlike the computers that ran the automated trading at the firm, which obviously act geuinely on their real belief in the stocks they are trading, because, well, everyone knows computers are always scrupulously honest.

    -- Terry

  7. Amusing they did it, amusing they were fined by Improv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All of this is a symptom of how far the stock market has branched from its purposes - it's not just a way people have involved distributed judgement of the worthiness of societal ventures anymore, now we have huge parasites in the system, feeding on each other. When the boot comes down, I don't think we should cry. Only a few of these people make an honest living that benefits society.

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    1. Re:Amusing they did it, amusing they were fined by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

      All of this is a symptom of how far the stock market has branched from its purposes - it's not just a way people have involved distributed judgement of the worthiness of societal ventures anymore,

      It hasn't been that for at least 50 years. Speculation has been the dominant market force for a very, very long time. It just never made as much headlines until recently.

      now we have huge parasites in the system, feeding on each other.

      We've had that since the first investment companies came into existence. It took what, three weeks at best?, until someone realized that investing in the future of a company is slow and risky, while cashing in on the expectations of those who are still dumb enough to do that is faster and safer - there are few things as certain as the stupidity of a large group of people.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  8. This type of thing happens in Banks all the time by awjr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Although you are probably not aware of it, most trading arms of the banks are at war against each other, trying to determine the trading algorythms each of them use, and deploy trading engines that take advantage of any weaknesses. It's one of the reasons you see an immense amount of mathmatical talent recruited by the Banks.

    The problem I find with this, is that, unless the t&cs they signed to indicated that they should report any flaws in the bank's trading system, then this is actually a failure on the bank's part to test their systems.

  9. Re:So many people miss the point by julesh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But here's the thing, their behavior wasn't honest or genuinely based on real belief in the value of the stocks.

    No day trader makes decisions based on real beliefs of the value of stocks. That just isn't how day trading works. Day trading is essentially taking advantage of patterns that form in price changes because of the ways that people decide to buy and sell stocks. Read any advanced how-to-day-trade text and you'll see most of it is about psychology, because understanding what other investers are doing allows you to predict how their actions will affect the price of stocks. The entire point is to guess what purchases and sales other traders will make and to make money from the price movement those will create. Which is exactly what this pair did, the only difference being that it was a single automated trader rather than an entire market they were second-guessing.

  10. Re:This type of thing happens in Banks all the tim by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Exactly. They're all second guessing each other, and that's OK.

    What these guys did was to third-guess them. Apparently that's cheating.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  11. Re:It's still market manipulation by shitzu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is like card counting. All you do is take play a game according to THEIR rules and be just a bit better at it than an average joe. Use of your memory in a card game is something that the casinos do not like and therefore it is banned.

  12. Re:So many people miss the point by Magada · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bullshit. They did no wrong. The whole stock market thing is based on outwitting other investors. If you choose to let George Soros manage your money, I am free to try and outwit him, taking some of that money if I succeed. How is it different if you let a computer manage your money?

    --
    Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
  13. Re:first by The+Grassy+Knoll · · Score: 4, Funny

    As it's a Norwegian-related story, shouldn't trolls be modded UP? .

    --
    They will never know the simple pleasure of a monkey knife fight
  14. Intriguing by The+Dodger · · Score: 5, Informative
    I'm not a lawyer and I don't speak Norwegian so I can't read the court document to find out exactly what happened. I am, however, an electronic trading specialist and I've also been a trader at a big American investment bank (one that didn't go bust, by the way, despite my best efforts).

    Rumour has it that these guys realised that there was a flawed algorithm (which turns out to have been operated by Timber Hill) making a market in illiquid shares, which set its quotes based either on the prices at which recent trades in those shares had been done, or on the algorithm's own position in the stock.

    To give some background: if you are making a market in a stock, that means you are prepared to buy from people who want to sell and sell to people who want to buy. Unless you're feeling particularly generous, you want to buy at a "low" price and sell at a "high" price. In liquid markets (i.e. where there are lots of people buying and selling), you can typically rely on the market mid price (i.e. the best bid plus the best offer, divided by two) and "spread" off that (e.g. add a cent to it to get your ask, subtract a cent from it to get your bid). As the market (i.e. the mid price) moves up and down, you can adjust your bid/ask to follow it and, if you end up buying or selling stock, you can adjust your bid/ask to make it more likely that your quotes get hit/lifted to flatten out your position (e.g. if someone hit your bid and sold you shares, you would probably lower both your bid and your offer, in relation to the market, to make it more likely that someone will buy the shares off you and less likely that you'll buy more shares).

    However, in illiquid markets and, in particular, in markets where you are the only market-maker, you may not be able to rely on a market mid, because you are the market, so it's up to you to set the price.

    So, let's say you start off with a quote of 99.99/100.01 and a quantity of 10,000 on each side. I come in and lift your ask (i.e. I submit an order to buy at 100.01, which matches against your ask) to the tune of 1,000 shares (i.e. I buy 1,000 shares from you). You are now "short" 1,000 shares, so you might adjust your price to make your bid more attractive to potential sellers - i.e. you change your quote to 100.00/100.02 - and you keep quoting with a 10,000 quantity on either side.

    I buy another 1000 shares from you. You shift your quote to 100.01/100.03

    I buy another 1000 shares from you. You shift your quote to 100.02/100.04

    I buy another 1000 shares from you. You shift your quote to 100.03/100.05

    I now own a total of 4000 shares, for which I paid a total of [(1000*100.01)+(1000*100.02)+(1000*100.03)+(1000*100.04)=] 400,100

    I now hit your bid and sell you back all 4000 shares at 100.03 for a total of 400,120

    I just made myself $20. Thanks very much. Rinse, lather, repeat.

    Now, you can see how some people might claim that I'm manipulating the market because I'm issuing orders into the market with the intent/expecation that the price will move as a result. But it's all a bit of a grey area.

    However, I might argue that I'm merely taking advantage of bids and offers that are already in the market. If the market-maker on the other side wants to quote prices that allow me to make a profit (or, more accurately, if he's been stupid enough to roll out a market-making algorithm that does that), then why shouldn't I take advantage of it?

    If this is what happened, then I'm surprised that Timber Hill decided to make an issue of it. If I'd been that stupid, I probably wouldn't want to draw everyone's attention to it. I would put the loss (which is this case appears to have been kless than $70k) down to experience, fix my algorithm and move on.

    People/banks/brokerages/traders/hedge funds do make mistakes like this. A long, long time ago, when I was younger and far more stupid than I am now, I once gave a trader a market-making algorithm that used the market

  15. Re:It's still market manipulation by TheLink · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most stock traders aren't targeting one other stock trader with a series of transactions

    Yes, the high frequency traders target more than one stock trader, after all they can make more money that way:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/24/business/24trading.html

    http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2009/07/24/business/0724-webBIZ-trading.ready.html

    "High-frequency traders often confound other investors by issuing and then canceling orders almost simultaneously. Loopholes in market rules give high-speed investors an early glance at how others are trading. And their computers can essentially bully slower investors into giving up profits -- and then disappear before anyone even knows they were there. "

    "And when a former Goldman Sachs programmer was accused this month of stealing secret computer codes -- software that a federal prosecutor said could "manipulate markets in unfair ways" -- it only added to the mystery. Goldman acknowledges that it profits from high-frequency trading, but disputes that it has an unfair advantage."

    In the recent US stock market crash fiasco, it seems that if their "fancy" computer programs screw up, the stock exchange rolls back the transactions. They don't do that for small investors.

    Now when small time investors (relatively anyway) beat some computer program at its game, they get convicted.

    Disgusting.

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  16. Re: Timber Hill didn't care by xiando · · Score: 4, Informative

    If this is what happened, then I'm surprised that Timber Hill decided to make an issue of it. If I'd been that stupid, I probably wouldn't want to draw everyone's attention to it. I would put the loss (which is this case appears to have been kless than $70k) down to experience, fix my algorithm and move on.

    It must be noted that TMB did not react or care at all. It was Oslo Stock Exchange (OSE) who made an issue of this and made The National Authority for Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and Environmental Crime in Norway (ØKOKRIM) take it to court. Timber Hill has made no comment, refused to appear in court and generally appear to want this to quietly go away.