Flash
Boys is the latest from Michael Lewis; it's a pointedly
literary business book featuring arresting characters, punchy (though not
always credible) dialogue, and a comforting good versus evil story line. It’s
the kind of financial journalism that could trigger movie royalties. The Flash
Boys themselves don’t appear in the book. They are the shadowy ‘high frequency
traders’ (HFTs) found within dark pools and hedge funds. HFTs use computer power
and unfathomable speed to score the tiny transactional profits that form the
bases of great fortunes. And – in the view of Lewis’ characters – the Flash
Boys aren’t playing fairly.
High
frequency trading occurs so fast that ‘after’ becomes ‘before’ in a way that
seems to challenge our conventional sense of time. The Flash Boys appear able to mysteriously know what we intend to carry out in the market before we do it –
and it is almost so. In the simplest case described by Lewis, a conventional
purchaser of a large block of shares will see its order fragmented into small
transactions arrayed at various (usually escalating) prices. The lowest price
attracts the first execution. An offer is dangled by the high frequency
trader as bait – small quantities of shares (often the minimum 100 share order)
at alluring prices. As the trap snaps closed, that is, as the token trade is executed and reported, it signals to the high frequency
trader that an active buyer has likely entered the market. The high frequency
trader (which has just sold the unwitting purchaser a small quantity of shares)
then uses speed (built literally on proximity to stock exchange servers) to
outrun the execution of the greater bulk of the purchaser’s order –
buying up shares at available prices and then reselling these to the purchaser
at higher prices – all within a tiny fraction of a second. The unwitting market
participant betrays herself; revealing in one instant what will likely follow
in the next.
So this
is the market behavior Lewis has uncovered – he then proceeds to build story
around it. In the first story, a mysterious entrepreneur lays fiber cable in the
straightest possible line between the commodities markets in Chicago and the
trading desks (that is, computers) in New Jersey, resulted in the fastest possible electronic connection. The second – and main – story
involves a host of good-guy bankers attached to the New York outpost of the
Royal Bank of Canada. They are a motley crew of outsiders, including Brad
Katsuyama, the Japanese-Canadian (“of all things”) leader of the band, and Ronan Ryan, an
Irish (not Irish-American) techie turned trader, who uncover and counter the
traps laid by the Flash Boys. Their solution to HFT predation is in part technical
(they gain better pricing by slowing things down), but is largely premised on
creating a trading space called IEX with fairer rules.