PeakDukeEnergy

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 16 August 2012

Chart of the day: High Frequency Trading

Posted on 14:24 by Unknown
Reuters has a great little animation showing the rise of high frequency trading on the stock exchange (published pretty much everywhere a week or two ago) - Chart of the day, HFT edition.
This astonishing GIF comes from Nanex, and shows the amount of high-frequency trading in the stock market from January 2007 to January 2012. (Which means that the Knightmare craziness of last week is not included.)

The various colors, as identified in the legend on the right, are all the different US stock exchanges. You might think there are only two stock exchanges in the US, but you’d be wrong: there are only two exchanges where stocks are listed. There are many, many more exchanges where stocks are traded.

What we see here is relatively low levels of high-frequency trading through all of 2007. Then, in 2008, a pattern starts to emerge: a big spike right at the close, at 4pm, which is soon mirrored by another spike at the open. This is the era of traders going off to play golf in the middle of the day, because nothing interesting happens except at the beginning and the end of the trading day. But it doesn’t last long.

By the end of 2008, odd spikes in trading activity show up in the middle of the day, and of course there’s a huge flurry of activity around the time of the financial crisis. And then, after that, things just become completely unpredictable. There’s still a morning spike for most of 2009, but even that goes away eventually, to be replaced with sheer noise. Sometimes, like at the end of 2010, high-frequency trading activity is very low. At other times, like at the end of 2011, it’s incredibly high. Intraday spikes can happen at any time of day, and volumes can surge and fall back in pretty much random fashion.

It’s certainly fair to say that if you take a long, five-year view, then you can see a clear rise in trading activity. But it’s also fair to say that there’s something quite literally out of control going on here. Just as the quants at Knight found themselves unable to turn off their machines for 30 long minutes last week, the HFT world in aggregate seemingly has a mind of its own when it comes to trading patterns. Or, to put it another way, if there’s a pattern here, it’s one incomprehensible to human minds.

Back in 2007, I wasn’t a fan of a financial-transactions tax; today, I am. And this chart shows better than anything why my opinion has changed. The stock market is clearly more dangerous than it was in 2007, with much greater tail risk; meanwhile, in return for facing that danger, society as a whole has received precious little utility. Are spreads a tiny bit tighter than they might be otherwise? Perhaps. But that has no effect on stock-market returns for long-term or even medium-term investors.

The stock market today is a war zone, where algobots fight each other over pennies, millions of times a second. Sometimes, the casualties are merely companies like Knight, and few people have much sympathy for them. But inevitably, at some point in the future, significant losses will end up being borne by investors with no direct connection to the HFT world, which is so complex that its potential systemic repercussions are literally unknowable. The potential cost is huge; the short-term benefits are minuscule. Let’s give HFT the funeral it deserves.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in high frequency trading | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Sit tight, the tidal wave of clean energy is on the horizon
    The SMH has a suprisingly optimistic article on some Australian cleantech companies - Sit tight, the tidal wave of clean energy is on the ho...
  • Commentary: Is Peak Oil Dead?
    Resilience.org has a post by Steve Andrews of ASPO USA - Commentary: Is Peak Oil Dead? . Q: So, in your opinion, M. King Hubbert more or les...
  • Peak oil can fuel a change for the better ?
    The SMH has a rare mainstream media opinion piece on peak oil (albeit of the doomy circa-2005 variety) - Peak oil can fuel a change for the...
  • A Farewell To The Oil Drum
    I started blogging (at Peak Energy ) about peak oil in late 2004, having become interested in the topic over a period of years. I'd firs...
  • The Third Carbon Age ?
    Michael Klare has a depressing article at TomDispatch arguing that the investment in unconventional fossil fuel development still dwarfs tha...
  • The CIA Wants To Control the Climate!!!!
    Jamais at Open The Future has a look at the recent Mother Jones report on geoengineering funding - The CIA Wants To Control the Climate!!!!...
  • The Ecuadorian Library
    Bruce Sterling has popped up at Medium with a great essay (following up on an older one called "The Blast Shack") on Manning, Assa...
  • Guerilla Grafters
    The LA Times has an article on a new variety of guerilla gardener - In San Francisco, a secret project bears fruit . All Tara Hui wanted to...
  • The Bicycle Barometer
    "Optimise For the Common Case" has a description of a nifty device indicating the best form of transport on a given day in London ...
  • Water shortages hit US power supply
    New Scientist has a look at the impact the ongoing drought in the US is having on power generation - Water shortages hit US power supply . A...

Categories

  • 3d printing (10)
  • abu dhabi (1)
  • acquion (1)
  • afghanistan (1)
  • africa (1)
  • agl (2)
  • agriculture (4)
  • air transport (1)
  • airborne wind turbines (2)
  • alan jones (1)
  • algae (1)
  • alinta (1)
  • altarock (2)
  • ammonia (1)
  • amory lovins (1)
  • apple (1)
  • aquaculture (1)
  • arctic ice (9)
  • artificial meat (2)
  • aspo (1)
  • australia (49)
  • bakken (2)
  • banff mountain film festival (3)
  • baseload fallacy (1)
  • baseload power (1)
  • batteries (2)
  • bay of fundy (2)
  • bees (5)
  • belgium (1)
  • better place (3)
  • beyond zero emissions (2)
  • bhp (3)
  • bicycle (5)
  • big brother (1)
  • bill gross (1)
  • biomimicry (1)
  • bioplastic (3)
  • biopower (1)
  • bipv (1)
  • bob brown (1)
  • botswana (1)
  • brightsource (4)
  • browse (1)
  • bruce schneier (1)
  • bruce sterling (3)
  • buckminster fuller (1)
  • california (2)
  • canada (3)
  • canberra (1)
  • car sharing (1)
  • carbon tax (3)
  • carnegie wave energy (1)
  • ccd (2)
  • cdte (1)
  • censorship (1)
  • chart (1)
  • chernobyl (1)
  • chevron (2)
  • china (5)
  • cigs (1)
  • cleantech (1)
  • climategate (1)
  • cng (2)
  • coal (3)
  • coal seam gas (12)
  • cold fusion (1)
  • cpv (3)
  • craig venter (1)
  • csiro (1)
  • csp (16)
  • cypherpunks (1)
  • daniel yergin (2)
  • data centres (1)
  • david attenborough (1)
  • denmark (1)
  • desertec (2)
  • deserts of gold (1)
  • distributed manufacturing (8)
  • drought (6)
  • east timor (1)
  • eastern star gas (1)
  • ebook (1)
  • ecat (1)
  • economics (1)
  • electric bikes (2)
  • electric vehicles (6)
  • electricity demand (1)
  • electricity grid (6)
  • electricity prices (1)
  • elon musk (2)
  • energy (1)
  • energy efficiency (5)
  • energy storage (9)
  • energy white paper (2)
  • enhanced oil recovery (1)
  • envia (1)
  • esolar (1)
  • ethanol (1)
  • eu (1)
  • europe (1)
  • exergy (1)
  • export land (2)
  • exxon (2)
  • fabber (3)
  • fairfax (1)
  • fedex (1)
  • feed in tariffs (1)
  • fermi paradox (1)
  • fertiliser (1)
  • finance (1)
  • first solar (2)
  • fish (1)
  • floating lng (1)
  • floating offshore wind power (1)
  • floating wind power (1)
  • food (2)
  • food prices (6)
  • ford (1)
  • four day week (2)
  • fracking (1)
  • france (1)
  • fukushima (3)
  • futurism (1)
  • gallium arsenide (1)
  • gas (1)
  • gazprom (1)
  • ge (1)
  • geodynamics (1)
  • geoengineering (6)
  • george monbiot (2)
  • george orwell (1)
  • geothermal energy (19)
  • geothermal power (21)
  • germany (3)
  • geysers (1)
  • giles parkinson (1)
  • glenn greenwald (1)
  • global warming (50)
  • globalisation (2)
  • gm (1)
  • google (4)
  • google earth (1)
  • greece (4)
  • green buildings (4)
  • green it (3)
  • green roofs (1)
  • greenland (3)
  • gross feed in tariffs (1)
  • gtl (1)
  • guerilla gardening (1)
  • halliburton (1)
  • high frequency trading (1)
  • high speed rail (2)
  • hugo chavez (1)
  • hydra tidal (1)
  • hydraulic fracturing (1)
  • hydro (1)
  • hyperloop (1)
  • ian dunlop (1)
  • ibm (1)
  • iceland (1)
  • ichthys (1)
  • iea (4)
  • india (4)
  • inpex (1)
  • internet (7)
  • internet of things (1)
  • iran (2)
  • iran oil bourse (1)
  • iraq (6)
  • ivanpah (1)
  • japan (4)
  • jaron lanier (1)
  • jeremy grantham (1)
  • jeremy rifkin (3)
  • jevons paradox (1)
  • jobs (1)
  • jorgen randers (2)
  • julian assange (4)
  • kashagan (1)
  • kazahkstan (1)
  • kenya (2)
  • kuwait (1)
  • latin monetary union (1)
  • led lighting (1)
  • leonardo maugeri (4)
  • limits to growth (3)
  • linkedin (1)
  • liquid metal battery (1)
  • lithium (1)
  • lithium ion batteries (1)
  • lloyd energy systems (1)
  • lng (12)
  • london array (1)
  • maine (2)
  • makani (1)
  • malaysia (1)
  • malcolm turnbull (3)
  • mapping (1)
  • marine current turbines (1)
  • martin ferguson (2)
  • massive change (1)
  • meat (1)
  • media (7)
  • merit order effect (2)
  • methane hyrates (1)
  • michael klare (2)
  • microbial fuel cells (1)
  • mighty river (1)
  • mitt romney (1)
  • mojave desert (1)
  • mongolia (1)
  • monitoring (1)
  • nab (1)
  • nanosolar (1)
  • natural gas (17)
  • natural gas pipelines (1)
  • new york (1)
  • new zealand (2)
  • nicholas stern (1)
  • nikolai tesla (1)
  • northern territory (1)
  • norway (1)
  • nsa (3)
  • nuclear power (14)
  • ocean (1)
  • ocean energy (30)
  • oceanlinx (1)
  • offshore wind power (2)
  • oil (6)
  • oil price (10)
  • oil production (2)
  • olympic dam (2)
  • origin energy (2)
  • orkney islands (1)
  • otec (2)
  • ows (3)
  • participatory panopticon (2)
  • pascal's wager (1)
  • paul hawken (1)
  • peak demand (1)
  • peak oil (41)
  • peak timber (1)
  • peaking plant (1)
  • pentland firth (1)
  • petratherm (3)
  • photography (2)
  • pine beetles (1)
  • plastic (1)
  • poland (1)
  • population (1)
  • printcrime (1)
  • rail transport (1)
  • rare earths (3)
  • ray anderson (1)
  • recycling (3)
  • renewable energy (18)
  • road transport (2)
  • ron paul (4)
  • rsi (1)
  • russ hinze (1)
  • salton sea (1)
  • salvador option (1)
  • santos (3)
  • sasol (2)
  • saudi arabia (3)
  • saul griffith (1)
  • scenario planning (1)
  • scotland (7)
  • semprium (1)
  • sergey brin (1)
  • severn estuary (3)
  • shale gas (16)
  • shale oil (9)
  • shell (2)
  • siemens (1)
  • silex (1)
  • smart appliances (1)
  • smart grids (3)
  • smart meters (5)
  • solar oasis (1)
  • solar power (39)
  • solar pv (11)
  • solar thermal power (17)
  • solarreserve (1)
  • south australia (3)
  • south korea (3)
  • spain (1)
  • subsidies (2)
  • suntech (1)
  • surveillance (8)
  • sydney (3)
  • system d (1)
  • tar sands (1)
  • technocracy (1)
  • tenax (2)
  • tesla (2)
  • texas (1)
  • thames (1)
  • the oil drum (3)
  • thin film solar (3)
  • third industrial revolution (1)
  • tidal energy australia (1)
  • tidal power (25)
  • tin o'reilly (1)
  • tony blair (1)
  • transport (1)
  • trapwire (1)
  • trigeneration (1)
  • uk (5)
  • us (2)
  • us politics (2)
  • venezuela (1)
  • vestas (1)
  • victoria (1)
  • video (1)
  • volt (1)
  • wa (1)
  • warren buffett (1)
  • water (4)
  • wave power (7)
  • wheatstone (1)
  • whyalla (1)
  • wikileaks (4)
  • wildlife photographer of the year (1)
  • william gibson (1)
  • wind power (15)
  • wizard power (1)
  • woodside (1)
  • zero carbon australia (2)
  • zinc (1)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (156)
    • ►  August (23)
    • ►  July (74)
    • ►  June (7)
    • ►  May (19)
    • ►  March (14)
    • ►  February (12)
    • ►  January (7)
  • ▼  2012 (191)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (11)
    • ►  October (7)
    • ►  September (25)
    • ▼  August (25)
      • Greg Muttitt: Whatever Happened to Iraqi Oil?
      • Korean plans for more nuclear power plants delayed...
      • Peak cheap oil is an incontrovertible fact
      • Overstretching the Australian LNG Industry
      • Why The Arctic Sea Ice Death Spiral Matters
      • Talison snapped up on bet of a battery-charged future
      • The storm blows in the crazies to GOP-land
      • Water shortages hit US power supply
      • Shale Gas Assets - Overpriced Or a Liquid Turn for...
      • Santos produces first shale gas in Australia
      • Scotland to Build World's First Community-Owned Ti...
      • US Lower Class Grateful It Not Part Of Nation's Mi...
      • Welcome to Dystopia: the dangerous food and energy...
      • Severn Tidal Power Project A Possibility Once More ?
      • The Assange Saga Continues
      • Gas projects to push up Australian electricity prices
      • India’s Living Bridges
      • Mitt Romney: peak oiler?
      • Chart of the day: High Frequency Trading
      • US: 200,000 GW of solar could be installed
      • David Strahan On Monbiot's Peak Oil U-Turn
      • The Tell-all telephone
      • Climate results convert sceptic: 'let the evidence...
      • 620 million without power: India's energy crisis a...
      • A climate risk to nuclear power
    • ►  July (29)
    • ►  June (24)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (8)
    • ►  March (23)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (34)
  • ►  2011 (153)
    • ►  December (38)
    • ►  November (52)
    • ►  October (32)
    • ►  September (31)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile