O mercado financeiro está sendo fraudado? Sim, há séculos, mas agora os Estados Unidos debatem os chamados Flash Boys, especialistas em computadores que usam milésimos de segundos para manipular e roubar o mercado, depois da publicação do livro acima de Michael Lewis, best seller no momento. Os Flash Boys, ou HFT (high-frequency traders) conhecem o que você vai comprar no mercado antes de você comprar, daí compram e vendem para você, colocando centavos a mais no preço.
Vejamos o que diz o Wall Street Journal:
Wall Street has always attracted more than
its share of scammers and bandits. Today's prime exemplars, argues
Michael Lewis
in "Flash Boys," are high-frequency traders—or HFTs—who
nickel-and-dime investors by exploiting a technological arsenal of
servers, fiber-optic cable and microwave transmission towers to trade
milliseconds ahead of everyone else in the markets. They have turned the
exchanges into a computerized monster churning up unprecedented market
volatility. All this has happened since the 2008 financial crisis, a
period in which the markets were supposed to have been under closer
scrutiny than ever.
Back in the day, if
an investor wanted to buy or sell a stock, he would call a broker, who
would find a way to execute the trade as efficiently as possible by
talking to other human beings. The arrival of computerized exchanges
slowly eliminated people from the process. Instead, bids and offers were
matched by servers. The shouting men in colorful jackets on the
exchange floors became irrelevant. In theory, this meant that the cost
of trading fell and that the markets became more efficient. But the
effects of technology are rarely so simple.
In 2002, 85% of all U.S. stock-market trading happened on the New York Stock Exchange and the rest mostly on the
Nasdaq.
NDAQ -1.92%
By early 2008, there were 13 different public exchanges, most
just stacks of computer servers in heavily guarded buildings in northern
New Jersey. Now, if you place an order for 1,000 shares of
Microsoft,
MSFT -1.37%
it pings from exchange to exchange claiming a few shares at each
stop, seeking the best price until the order is completed. But the
moment that it hits the first exchange, the HFTs see it, and they race
ahead to the other exchanges, buy the stock you want, and sell it back
to you for fractionally more than you hoped to pay. All in a matter of
milliseconds, millions of times a day to millions of investors—your
grandmother and hedge-fund titans alike. These tiny but profitable
trades, Mr. Lewis writes, add up to big profits for firms like Getco and
Citadel. He cannot put a hard number on the size of the industry,
suggesting only that many billions are involved.
...
Mr. Lewis wants
to argue, though, that the markets are not just ridiculous, but rigged.
The heroes of this book are clear: Mr. Katsuyama eventually assembles a
team of talented misfits to create an HFT-proofed exchange called IEX,
where a price is a price is a price. It's backed by leading hedge funds
and banks (and
Jim Clark,
the co-founder of Netscape and the subject of Mr. Lewis's 1999
book, "The New New Thing"). Mr. Lewis gives the reader extensive insight
into how his heroes see the market, but the alleged villains of the
piece—HFTs themselves—are all but silent in their own defense. "Flash
Boys" is a decidedly one-sided book.
Yet
there are reasonable arguments to be made that the frenetic trading by
HFTs leads to greater liquidity and more efficient pricing. Or, God
forbid, that they are not nearly so harmful to investors' returns as Mr.
Lewis makes out. Their rise has coincided with a historic bull market.
It is not hard to imagine a different book by Michael Lewis, one
celebrating HFTs as revolutionary outsiders, a cadre of innovative
engineers and computer scientists (many of them immigrants), rising from
the rubble of 2008 and making fools of a plodding financial system.
"Flash Boys" makes no claim to be a balanced account of financial
innovation: It is a polemic, and a very well-written one. Behind its
outrage, however, lies nostalgia for a prelapsarian Wall Street of trust
and plain dealing, which is a total mirage.
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O blog Of Two Minds, falou mais sobre o assunto.
Aqui vai também uma entrevista com Michael Lewis, autor do livro.
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