
Trading at the Speed of Light
How Ultrafast Algorithms Are Transforming Financial Markets
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Buy Now for $26.99
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Narrated by:
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Jonathan Cowley
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By:
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Donald MacKenzie
About this listen
In today's financial markets, trading floors on which brokers buy and sell shares face-to-face have increasingly been replaced by lightning-fast electronic systems that use algorithms to execute astounding volumes of transactions. Trading at the Speed of Light tells the story of this epic transformation. Donald MacKenzie shows how in the 1990s, a new approach to trading - automated high-frequency trading or HFT - began and then spread throughout the world. HFT has brought new efficiency to global trading, but has also created an unrelenting race for speed, leading to a systematic, subterranean battle among HFT algorithms.
In HFT, time is measured in nanoseconds (billionths of a second), and in a nanosecond the fastest possible signal - light in a vacuum - can travel only 30 centimeters, or roughly a foot. That makes HFT exquisitely sensitive to the length and transmission capacity of the cables connecting computer servers to the exchanges' systems and to the location of the microwave towers that carry signals between computer datacenters. Drawing from more than 300 interviews with high-frequency traders, the people who supply them with technological and communication capabilities, exchange staff, regulators, and many others, MacKenzie reveals the extraordinary efforts expended to speed up every aspect of trading.
©2021 Princeton University Press (P)2021 Gildan MediaFor Those Getting Into HFT
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This is an extremely well-researched, impartial, and surprisingly thorough overview of the movement from physical trading pits to computerized limit order books, as well as the functions of different market participants, and the 'latency race'.
I would not hesitate to recommend this book to anybody planning to work in quantitative finance. That being said, the book is entirely non-technical, and easily accessible to a layman who desires a more serious treatment of the topic than other mainstream paperbacks.
The Best Book Ever on Computerization of Trading
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Really bad
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