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User: EricScott

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  1. Re:Lots of people fired at Apple under Jobs on Apple Axes Head of Mapping Team · · Score: 1

    Warning, you have left the reality distortion field. Please return immediately.

  2. Re:time to get a job on wall street on Faculty To Grad Students: Go Work 80-Hour Weeks! · · Score: 1

    Um, that wall street job? It's going to consume far more than 60-80 hours per week. And with far more stress. Just sayin..

  3. Re:And THIS is the heart of our financial system.. on Mysterious Algorithm Was 4% of Trading Activity Last Week · · Score: 1

    Bravo! Well done!

    Nanex

  4. Re:Market manipulation on Mysterious Algorithm Was 4% of Trading Activity Last Week · · Score: 1

    Kudos. The most succinct, illuminating post on the subject!

    nanex

  5. Re:Testing on Mysterious Algorithm Was 4% of Trading Activity Last Week · · Score: 1

    They knew what they were doing

    At least twice a day, it would stop for about 5 minutes. Probably to upgrade software.

  6. Re:Truth or dare... on Mysterious Algorithm Was 4% of Trading Activity Last Week · · Score: 1

    Tell me the stock and date, and I'll get the event into the hands of people who can do something about it.

    The SEC has plenty of staff and $. They are also completely owned by Wall Street. And that is a fact.

  7. Re:Truth or dare... on Mysterious Algorithm Was 4% of Trading Activity Last Week · · Score: 1

    As the author of those points, I have to write: awesome presentation of them!

    Eric Hunsader
    Nanex

  8. Ask Knight Capital about this. on Ask Slashdot: Should Developers Install Their Software Themselves? · · Score: 1

    Anyone from Knight Capital want to comment?

  9. Re:Note to TSA on TSA Spending $245 Million On "Second Generation" Body Scanners · · Score: 1

    Or just depressurize the cabin and wait for everyone to pass out.

  10. Re:Content free on More Warnings About High-Frequency Trading · · Score: 2

    If you want the real story try Stucchio's blog series beginning at: http://www.chrisstucchio.com/blog/2012/hft_apology.html

    My pitiful TLDR summary of Stucchio's work combined with some other observations

    Stucchio presents a fairy tale, picture perfect world that doesn't exist. Stucchio forgot to mention Brutus' algo which comes along and offers 20.01 for a stock, but cancels it 1 milliseconds later, then offers 20.00 for 1 ms, then 19.99, then 5,000 random prices between 18.00 and 20.00 for the next 800 milliseconds. Sometimes at the top of the book, sometimes not. All to confuse order routers or destroy latency tables in Thor like programs.

    When Brutus sees an order coming in on Exchange A, his algo quickly backs off on the other exchanges because it knows that over time, it results in slightly higher profits.

    Brutus also knows that exchange B will delay by X microseconds when the total # of messages in symbols A-C exceed 20,000. So if a delay is needed in ABC, just jam the other stocks in that group with useless quotes

    I could go on all night.

  11. How High Frequency Trading Harms Even Long Term In on More Warnings About High-Frequency Trading · · Score: 1

    From a recent post I made

    How High Frequency Trading Harms Even Long Term Investors

    • 1. Investors are warned against using market orders and stops because HFT can and will suddenly withdraw their quotes . This alone should tell you something is rotten at the core.
    • 2. Some universities, such as Georgetown, can no longer afford to buy TAQ market data for their professors or students to analyze. This will lead to less academic oversight, guidance and involvement, as well as students who are less prepared for careers on Wall Street. Data has become prohibitively expensive because of all the excessive quotes generated by HFT.
    • 3. Quote spreads are much wider and less stable during market open , which causes many micro flash crashes in individual stocks.
    • 4. Misleading price quotes interferes with price discovery, one of the core functions of a stock exchange.
    • 5. Mis-allocation of resources, both human and technological.
    • 6. If left unchecked by regulators, traders who want to process quotes, will soon need super-computers, 10 gigabit connections and their own engineering staff to have the same basic level of trading information they needed in 2006.
    • 7. HFT generated so much Quote Spam in the flash crash, that it took 5 months for the SEC to assemble the data.
    • 8. During the flash crash, excessive quotes from HFTs overloaded quote data feeds, causing severe delays: stock quotes from some exchanges were behind over 30 seconds during the height of the flash crash.
  12. Re:Trading's Too Fast When It Ceases to Mean Anyth on More Warnings About High-Frequency Trading · · Score: 1

    Only if you are in it for day-trading profits. And if you are, well, you deserve to be beaten senseless by some HFT algorithm.

    If you're a long term investor, with a time horizon of many decades, this doesn't matter. For example, I have a stock I bought 15 years ago. It has gone up by around 3X in that time. HFT makes no difference to me when I've held a stock over many years or decades. The exact microsecond it sells doesn't matter to me after a period of decades.

    Let me ask you something. Would you recommend homeowners ditch their fire or title insurance then? Because you have about the same chance of getting burned when the time comes when you need to sell that stock, as you have of a major fire. Might as well save on the premiums.

    Seriously. I've talked to quite a few people who have been caught up in an "event" where they had to sell (for tax reasons, for financial reasons, etc.) and they just happened to pick the wrong moment of time to trade. And there have been thousands of such "bad times" so far this year.

  13. Hurricane - shareware on Hurricane Could Make a Mess of Republican Convention · · Score: 1

    Back in the late 80's I wrote a hurricane tracking program called Hurricane (what else) and released it as shareware. I also obtained hurricane data back to 1886 from NOAH and by overlapping every storm track and summing the affected area with wind speed, I found that a section of Florida from Tampa, south to Sarasota, had the least cumulative wind speed. Actually that is the safest area in the southern U.S. when it comes to hurricanes.

    But here's hoping for some change on that

  14. In year 2000, it sold for less than cash on Apple Is Now the Most Valuable Company In History · · Score: 1

    I purchased Apple stock back in 2000 when it was selling for less than the cash it had in the bank. That is, the brand was worth less than zero. This was right around the height of the internet bubble, and Apple had no "internet play". I bought the stock because I was starting a new company that would consume all my time and wouldn't have time to look at my "portfolio". So I bought Apple, because, get this, it was about the "safest" play out there. Because Apple had a lot of cash in the bank and net income, I figured the worst thing that could happen is it would remain about where it was.

  15. Re:Yes, except the cutting edge always becomes nor on When Flying Was a Thrill · · Score: 1

    ..and the phone in your pocket makes Kirk's look like a pile of crap.

    Um, Kirk's had this special "light" that would make people disappear. Sometimes even heat up rocks in a frozen wasteland. And it could call Enterprise. Just saying.

  16. Wall Street Software Devs Prohibited on Google's Self-Driving Cars: 300,000 Miles Logged, Not a Single Accident · · Score: 1

    Whatever happens, let's all agree to keep Wall Street Software guys from getting into this field.

  17. USB is trouble on Ask Slashdot: Simple Way To Backup 24TB of Data Onto USB HDDs ? · · Score: 1

    USB will copy files, but not identical copies. Firewire is better.

    But the best/cheapest solution, is a Dell MD-1000. It will take 2tb generic drives.

  18. Re:Completely wrong on Wall Street and the Mismanagement of Software · · Score: 1

    200 times a second?

    For 29 minutes straight?

    Why did some stocks end up with 10s of thousands of wash sales, and other stocks result in principal positions?

  19. Re:So, sue the developer for the cost he caused. on Wall Street and the Mismanagement of Software · · Score: 1

    Or a "You read my mind" moderation.

  20. Re:Wny not just tax trades? on Wall Street and the Mismanagement of Software · · Score: 1

    The problem is that there will be "exceptions" for certain groups. This is how its always been, and it always seems to go to the groups causing the.. um.. exceptions.

  21. Re:That's What We Did on Wall Street and the Mismanagement of Software · · Score: 1

    Stupid Article.

    They were watching it. Like a hawk. But it was another executable causing the problems that they didn't realize was running. I'm sure this will all come out eventually.

  22. Re:But ... on The World's First 3D-Printed Gun · · Score: 1

    Or require pi to be just 3 and not some crazy non-repeating non-ending number.

  23. Re:Windows 8 is not a catastrophe.... on Why Valve Wants To Port Games To Linux: Because Windows 8 Is a Catastrophe · · Score: 1

    Steve Balmer has led microsoft to a point where they no longer have this luxury.

  24. Re:A bit of hyperbole... on Open Millions of Hotel Rooms With Arduino · · Score: 1

    You must be new here.

    We don't venture outside.

  25. What if they impregnate them with a foul taste? on Feds Ban 'Buckyballs' Magnets · · Score: 1

    I have no idea if this is even possible, but what if they impregnated the magnets with a foul taste? Maybe babies/toddlers don't swallow everything that goes in their mouths right away, and a foul taste would help them make the right decision and spit them out.