Contemplating Financial Trading At Picosecond Resolution
pbahra writes "One complaint made of the modern stock market is that it is concerned too much on the short term. A second is a long time in cash-equities trading. Four or five years ago, trading firms started to talk of trading speeds in terms of milliseconds. But in recent weeks trading geeks have started to talk about picoseconds, in what is a truly mind-boggling concept: a picosecond is one trillionth of a second. Put another way, a picosecond is to one second what one second is to 31,700 years."
Thanks for fucking up the market for the rest of the world. This image comes to mind..
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3014/2907411559_117ac480b5.jpg
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
The money they take out of the system is real, it has an effect and their actions have consequences. What's more, the changes in the market that they are betting on and influencing have nothing to do with the real world. It amounts to influenceable gambling where the act of betting effects the outcome of the bet.
"Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
Goldman Sachs has colocated at the NYSE, and is front running the stock market to the tune of 13.4 billion dollars in profit every year, simply because of their location. And they also sell self destructing financial instruments to their own clients while betting against them. Here, it's been in the news. But I doubt you watch the news.
So, they're fucking cheating shits who do nothing but game algorithms and lie to people to steal their money, and you're a stupid cunt for having such blind faith in an opaque market.
Agree with those who say these guys are essentially parasites. But, it's worse.
The one thing that MUST change -- these high frequency trading systems have malfunctioned, so they end up dumping ~$30-40 a share stock for $1 a share. Did the company running it lose money (and, consequently, everyone else make a bit by getting stock at a substantial discount)? Oh no. The stock exchange *CANCELLED* their trades. If you, I, or some regular trader, accidentally put up stock for $1 instead of $41, would anyone "fix" it for us? Of course not. These true parasites benefit from their high frequency trades, but when that would lose them money at high frequency the exchange "fixes" it for them.
yo dawg I heard you like gambling, so we put a bet on your bet so you can bet while you bet.
Balderdash!
And that's not even the worst of it. I don't mind so much if Goldman Sachs rips off other banks and their rich customers who should be able to make choices on their own. I don't mind so much if they make money on dangerous (or even stupid) trades. I also don't care if they go broke, or their customers go broke doing stupid trades.
But then when they lose all their money, and ask me, through the federal government to bail them out, that's when I really get steamed. I want a lot of people to go to jail, both politicians and bankers. Or at a very minimum, rewrite banking law so they never get my money like that again. Is that too much to ask?
This should be the law (and I am quoting Paul Volcker on this, so it isn't economically unreasonable):
ANYTHING THAT IS TOO BIG TO FAIL, IS ALSO TOO BIG TO EXIST. Break them up and sell off the pieces. And sorry for the yelling. This gets me really upset.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Uh the problems are:
1) When stuff goes fine they pocket all the profits, but when stuff goes bad, they keep their profits and everyone else pays for it.
2) When they win the bet they keep the money, when they have bugs in their fancy programs and lose money, they rollback the transactions and/or even sue/jail the people who benefited from their bugs (yes this has happened). Note: I'm not talking about bugs in the "casino"'s software but bugs in the software the "gamblers" use to decide on what to bet on.
3) The well connected ones also get to "cheat" - they get to see and do stuff 30 milliseconds before everyone else does. This is a big advantage. Google for that if you don't believe me. This is unfair.
There is really no benefit to society from picosecond trading. All it produces is more fancy excuses the intelligent sociopaths can use to take money from us.
They can talk about liquidity and creating markets but it is all bullshit - just look at what has actually happened.
All that they've created are systems where gamblers can play fancy millisecond[1] games to gamble with OTHER people's money and collect big fees, salaries and bonuses for doing so. When they win big they keep the big profits. When they lose big, they keep their "normal profits" and we have to pay for the losses.
If I didn't have a conscience I'd be happy to do that too - it's free money.
[1] In fact to make the trading fair, transactions should be valid for a second or more otherwise the speed of light makes location matter. Currently they can issue transactions and cancel them within milliseconds before the other traders can act on them.
Nothing that crazy is needed just add a 10c per trade tax, the only problem is all the major trading countries would need to do it simultaneously or else the market would just move.
Everyone says that, but is it true? Look at who is saying it. Mostly the people we know for being in bed with the stock market exploiters. The same people who bailed out the big banks with our tax money, while before and after telling us that they need to cut this and cut that because they don't have enough money.
It's a strawman.
Here's a much more likely scenario:
Imagine one large country or region (the US, or the EU) starts to introduce a trade tax. Say, 0.01% - irrelevant to any real trades, destructive to margin trading. So real trade won't move, because moving would be more expensive. Some high-volume and all margin traders would move. Say the EU starts the tax. So they move to the US, to Asia, etc.
But now the US and Asia and everyone else are in an interesting position. Instead of elaborating on it, let's play it through: The US also introduces a trade tax, but at 0.005% - half of the EU, mostly same effect. Real traders couldn't care less and stay put. Some high-volume traders stay, most margin traders go out of business or move to Asia.
Now Asia's in the same position. A bit of quick thinking reveals that they can make billions in taxes by introducing a 0.001% trade tax. So they do. Real trades stay put, as before. High-volume trades move to Asia, though some move back to the US and EU since operating costs and other factors start being more important than the tax difference. Margin trading stops being profitable unless the margin is considerable enough to be worth it.
Saying that you can't be the first because everyone else doesn't do it ignores the fact that "everyone else" is not a static entity. There are many, many cases throughout history where "everyone else" was just waiting for someone to make the first move.
It's a strawman. Don't fall for it. Anyone saying "we would love to, but we can't, it needs to be introduced simultaneously world-wide." really means "I don't want to".
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org