Why the Stock Market Lost $1 Trillion for 36 Minutes - YouTube

Channel: Half as Interesting

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Hey, so, have you heard of the 2010 flash crash?
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When a slapdash backlash trashed the market’s cash?
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No?
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Then here’s a brash rehash.
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So, on May 6, 2010, mostly as a result of Greece pulling some classic Greece moves,
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the stock market was having a pretty bad day.
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But then, at 2:32 pm, for seemingly no reason at all, the market started dropping like,
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in the words of economic expert Calvin Broadus Jr, it was hot.
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In the four minutes from 2:41 to 2:44 alone, it lost 300 points, and by 2:45 it had gone
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down a total of 600 points.
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But then, like Jesus after his famous three-day nap, it started to rise, and by 3:07, it had
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almost completely recovered.
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Basically, in a span of 36 minutes, $1 trillion dollars disappeared and then reappeared like
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it was Jeremy Piven’s hairline.
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So
 what happened?
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Well, according to a controversial––we’ll get to that later––SEC report, this trillion
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dollar now-you-see-me now-you-don’t act can be traced to a firm called Waddell and
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Reed Financial selling $4.1 billion in e-mini S&P 500 futures contracts.
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That’s a lot of words, but basically, they’re just contracts tied directly to the overall
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value of the S&P 500— which is an index, used as a tool to see how the market’s doing
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as a whole, composed of the 500 biggest stocks on the stock market.
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And the good folks at Waddell and Reed Financial, or WARF, as I and nobody else calls them,
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decided that instead of doing the trade by having some poor intern click a button for
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half the day, they would have a sell algorithm handle it.
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Now normally, a trade that big would happen slowly, over like 5 hours, but apparently,
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WARF had taken a sort of Bob Marley approach and told their algorithm not to worry about
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time, or about price, for that matter––so it just started selling the contracts as fast
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as possible at whatever price was out there.
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As you may remember from the economics lecture your dad gave you when he refused to invest
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in your lemonade stand, supply and demand means that when a ton of contracts get sold,
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especially very quickly, prices tend to dip.
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“But Sam” you scream at the top of your lungs, “how did a $4 billion trade turn
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into a $1 trillion loss?”
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Well, the problem of this dumb algorithm was made worse by, you guessed it, other dumb
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algorithms––in particular, ones called high-frequency trading algorithms, which are
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designed to make lots of trades very quickly.
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Often, HFTs serve as something called “market makers”––basically middlemen, who buy
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up an asset when it's being sold, so that when buyers show up, they can turn around
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and sell it to them, and pocket any price difference.
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Now, seemingly, most of the $4.1 billion of contracts that WARF sold were quickly bought
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by HFTs, but here’s the thing: HFTs don’t actually like to hold contracts––their
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whole thing is buying them and then immediately selling them.
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So what happened was, a bunch of HFTs started unloading the contracts onto
 other HFTs,
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who then unloaded those contracts onto other HFTs, and so on and so on until the contracts
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were basically being passed around and around and around like a toxic, market-destroying
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hot potato, driving down prices and creating chaos.
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And that led to a new problem: a lot of the algorithms that serve as market-makers reached
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pre-programmed thresholds that forced them to exit the market, because prices were dropping
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so fast and risk had gotten too high.
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And when the market makers pulled out, it massively reduced liquidity, which meant the
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market plunged even more.
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Now, so far, I’ve been talking about the futures market, and I told you at the beginning
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that the stock market collapsed.
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Well, that wasn’t a mistake.
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I don’t mank mistakes.
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The futures crash bled into the stock market thanks to a group of jerks called arbitrage
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traders.
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You see, when you buy a future, you’re really buying a stock that you just get later.
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Arbitrage traders saw S&P futures contracts getting cheap, while the S&P stocks that make
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up those futures were still expensive.
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So, they started selling their expensive regular stocks to buy the cheap future version of
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the same stocks, and all that rapid stock selling basically transferred the futures
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crash over to the stock market.
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So, why did it end?
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Well the same reason Kim and Kanye’s marriage ended: thanks to the Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s
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“Stop Logic Functionality.”
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Basically, the CME has a mechanism where, when everything starts going nuts, they force
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trading to stop so that everybody can have a juice box and think about what they’ve
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done.
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After a five second stop at 2:45 pm, when trading resumed, the panic had subsided, and
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people realized that stocks had gone down for no good reason, which now meant that stocks
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were basically available at a discount, which meant everybody went and bought them, which
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pushed the price right back up to where it had been before.
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So there you go: the flash crash, explained.
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Unless Vox has copyrighted “explained.”
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Uh
 the flash crash
 said how it works.
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Exceeeept
 everything I just told you is actually just one theory of what happened.
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It’s probably the most complete theory, and it’s the one that the SEC stands by,
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but
 the truth is, even eleven years after the flash crash, there isn’t consensus about
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what caused it.
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The SEC report received a lot of criticism from some pretty legitimate institutions,
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including the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
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And while published peer-reviewed academic research offered an explanation centered on
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something called order flow toxicity, that was later called into question by further
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peer-reviewed research.
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And there are a ton of other theories, involving decentralization, spoofing, and technical
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glitches.
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In the end, the real takeaway is that financial markets that literally undergird human society
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have become so complicated and insane and fragile that they can wipe out $1 trillion
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in value, then add it all back in 36 minutes, and nobody will ever be totally sure why.
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Which
 isn’t a very funny conclusion, so here’s a Spot-the-Difference game.
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Can you spot the difference between these two SEC logos?
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That’s right: it was a trick question.
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They’re the same.
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Now, there is one other really weird part of the flash crash: for a short period, a
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bunch of blue-chip stocks, worth about $40-ish, started selling for literally one penny, while
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at the exact same moment, a few similar other stocks started trading for $100,000.
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But the thing is, we have to keep these videos pretty short or our all-knowing Lord and Savior,
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the YouTube algorithm, will punish us.
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But don’t fear: I made a whole four minute video about it that you can watch right now
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on Nebula.
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educational series Nigel Latta Blows Stuff Up.
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