The Enid News and Eagle, Enid, OK

Ag

October 20, 2012

High-speed trading rules the markets

ENID, Okla. — If it’s a bad idea to play with matches, it’s an even worse idea to play with a blowtorch in a fireworks factory.

And yet that’s just what farmers and ranchers do every time they price their cattle, corn, cotton and other commodities in markets dominated by “high-frequency trading” (HFT), trading driven by computers running algorithms developed by money-managers who don’t know cocoa beans from soybeans and don’t care.

These supersonic freaks of finance, blogger Tyler Durden explained on the Zero Option website Oct. 2., “stuff quotes, front run each other, spoof, layer and generally make a mockery out of the thing formerly known as the market.”

That these lightening fast, fabulously large, mostly unseen and nakedly speculative trades move markets is no secret; more than 100 recent academic and government studies have fingered them as the main driver in today’s neck-breaking price moves.

Nor is it a secret that banks, big agbiz and traders are greasing every skid in Washington, D.C., to ensure every attempted regulation of this Big-Boy-in-the-Dark game will be fought in Congress and challenged in federal courts.

Three items nearly guarantee their success in this fight: money, money and money.

First, high-frequency trading now generates enormous revenue for futures exchanges. According to the financial services company Raymond James, nearly 32 percent of all 2011 revenue at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange came from HFT. On the New York Stock Exchange, HFT was tied to 21.4 percent of all 2011 revenue, on the Nasdaq 17 percent and the on Chicago Board of Options, 22.4 percent.

On Oct. 16 the Wall Street Journal chronicled the latest version of the HFT game, hard-to-explain prices in the natural gas futures market. Called “‘banging the beehive,’… high-speed traders send a flood of orders in an effort to trigger huge price swings just before the (federal government’s weekly gas supply and demand) data hit” the market.

If you think someone should do something about this madness someone is.

Under Dodd-Frank financial reforms, writes Senior Policy Analyst Steve Suppan on the Oct. 10 “Think Forward” blog at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has “set limits on… commodity contracts (that) can be held by any one entity and its affiliates… to reduce or prevent financial speculation in excess of the liquidity needs of the commodity producers.”

Those CFTC rules were to be in place Oct. 12.

On Sept. 28, however, U.S. District Court Judge Robert Wilkins declared the CFTC had “misinterpreted” the Dodd-Frank mandate. He “nullified the rule,” notes Suppan, and essentially ordered the CFTC to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of it.

Suppan believes Wilkins’ ruling effectively kills new oversight of high-frequency trading and its hand-in-glove partner in market volatility, unregulated over-the-counter derivative trading.

That’s great news to Big Agbiz and bad news for anyone who relies on open, transparent markets. When only a few major players have better or more complete market information, the many who don’t are sure to be skinned. And we were in 2008. Call me crazy, but everything about these high-speed crazies demands more regulation, not less, and Congress needs to support the law it passed, Dodd-Frank, before we’re all just a bunch of beaten-up bees.



© 2012 ag comm

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