If it's illegal, why does the stock market allow a system where this can happen?
that is the very pertinent question. rather than make it a crime, impose technical limits and restrictions that prevent it. its a long running debate, advocates claim the high frequency trading provide liquidity to the market and restricting that is a Bad Thing, markets would collapse, fire and brimstone would fall as the capitalist system ground to a halt. others say everything was just fine before the technology allowed for it...
Well I didn't watch the trial, but I read what was in the media, which wasn't just what his lawyers said. He's been accused of spoofing, but that's not a crime here, so he can't be extradited for it. So the US have come up with the idea that he materially contributed to a market crash, which wiped nearly a trillion dollars of value off the market, which sounds quite unbelievable. Particularly since the US regulator already concluded that the crash was because of a US hedge fund.
So he's being extradited for a crime he didn't commit, so that he can be tried for a crime that doesn't exist in UK law.
its a long running debate, advocates claim the high frequency trading provide liquidity to the market and restricting that is a Bad Thing, markets would collapse, fire and brimstone would fall as the capitalist system ground to a halt. others say everything was just fine before the technology allowed for it...
I don't really have an outright objection to high frequency trading, I meant more the "spoofing".
@ sten_super, i think we know that the markets have long ceased to be just about allocation of resources, and become a means to profit in themselves. HFT and a few other practice such as naked shorting have become worts on a good system in principle.
That's why I asked the question - because the idea that HFT provides liquidity is rubbish, so I can't see how an advocate would pursue that line of reasoning.
as far as i can tell its based on a technically correct view. more liquidity means easier to find a buyer/seller, means easier to trade, ergo the more liquidity the better. its better to have a 100 bids in the market than 10. but that doesn't scale beyond a certain point and takes no account of the quality or purpose of the liquidity. the algo traders are essentially trading among themselves and the market makers, while the actual traders are just dipping in an out of the ocean.
Isn't it the algorithms that are providing that liquidity though, rather than (per se) HFT?
As a layman, how can it be possible to sell something that you do not have? Naked shorting and this type of spoofing are exactly the same as far as I can see - you pretend to sell something that does not exist.
I dont know , but it should be ,its gaming the market pure and simple , but this bloke is a massive scapegoat , there were plenty of people doing what he did , theyve picked on him because the a lot of the others would have the funds and retained legal teams to fight the case.So how come spoofing isn't illegal in the UK?
It is.appears you very much have read what his lawyers are saying. if it was a simple as that the court would have thrown out the extradition as it wouldn't have any basis. he is wanted for charges of wire fraud and market manipulation. spoofing is a method of doing that, and has been made a specific crime in the US, but the methods are immaterial to the act itself. the link to the flash crash is background for the story, but they have apparently 400 instances to go by (hence running up a £30 profit), the case does not rely on one event. though no doubt he is being made an example of by the US, because this is probably going on all the time.
Really ?? How do you know this ?? Thats right, you dont , youre talking absolute sh*t ,about something you know very little about , something I've seen you pull other people up for .How many of our own Bankers were extradited or jailed for their roles in the financial meltdown of 2008?
None you say? Oh.
How many are still getting obscene bonuses and favourable tax laws?
All of them? Oh.
Bloke in Hounslow gets extradited for a law that doesn't exist in this country. All sounds fair then...
Correct.that is the very pertinent question. rather than make it a crime, impose technical limits and restrictions that prevent it. its a long running debate, advocates claim the high frequency trading provide liquidity to the market and restricting that is a Bad Thing, markets would collapse, fire and brimstone would fall as the capitalist system ground to a halt. others say everything was just fine before the technology allowed for it...
Again, correct.Is that genuinely the position of advocates, that HFT really provides liquidity? Because that seems to me (as someone with only very tangential knowledge) as patently nonsense. HFT has created an arms-race that involves substantial wasted resources (e.g. the infrastructure races to shave milliseconds off communication times), it doesn't do anything to aid the efficient allocation of resources..