The New York Times outlines the impact of the COVID-19 market crash on FIRE plans. Most FIRE plans made assumptions about strong, consistent market returns each & every year. Nearly none of the FIRE strategies model scenarios where the market falls 30% and does not recover for a significant period of time. Due to this many FIRE "retirements" are now in the flusher as well as suffering from travel restrictions to low cost areas to live (“geographic arbitrage).
As stated earlier - "The primary failure of FIRE is that it does not plan for low, medium,
and high scenarios in regards to market returns and inflation."
NYT - They All Retired Before They Hit 40. Then This Happened
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/02/style/fire-movement-stock-market-coronavirus.html
Showing posts with label market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label market. Show all posts
Monday, April 6, 2020
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Flash Crash – Algorithms Gone Mad

The details of High Frequency Trading has been shrouded in mystery; now the curtain is being pulled back thanks to firms like Nanex; a company that captures market data. Nanex has posted an extensive analysis of the Flash Crash of May 6th.
Not content to limit the information to May 6th, the Crop Circle of the Day by Nanex is an interesting graphical chart of HFT algorithms at work each day. Some of the charts are fascinating and simply make you ask “what is going on and why”. Are these the key algorithms at work or are they simply making noise to cover up other trades? Are these a type of coded communication between firms to manipulate the market? Are some of these algorithms simply bugs? Should Quote Stuffing be banned? And does the SEC ever look at this activity? An endless train of questions can be arrived at.
Maybe the key to winning in the markets is decoding what these algorithms are attempting to do. Many simply swing at hyper speed spewing thousands of quotes per second across various price ranges switching between bid and ask. Should the new fantasy of an individual trader be creating a software bot that will “go to war” with these algorithms and steal profits from the HFT firms.
Probably by the time that any retail trader figures out the magic, the government regulatory authorities will come down on the HFT firms and limit their activities. It is becoming clear that hyper trading activity accounting for the vast majority of the trades does not lead to orderly markets and easily can cause more Flash Crash scenarios when all the computers pull their bids simultaneously.
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