Fast Finance

Does the financial world allow social loafing?

Business & Finance, Finance & Investing, Finance
Cover of the book Fast Finance by Mr Gervais Williams, Bloomsbury Publishing
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Author: Mr Gervais Williams ISBN: 9781472920560
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Publication: January 29, 2015
Imprint: Bloomsbury Information Language: English
Author: Mr Gervais Williams
ISBN: 9781472920560
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication: January 29, 2015
Imprint: Bloomsbury Information
Language: English

Market liquidity is an essential feature of the stock market, so investors and corporates can transact as and when it suits them. A key priority for stock market operators is to ensure there are market participants with a wide range of different perspectives, which offer plentiful trading volumes. Stock exchanges need to encourage investors with shorter-term horizons to lubricate the transaction process; the vitality of shorter-term operators is a key part of the success of the whole.

However, in recent times the proliferation of credit has favoured speculative strategies, and along with new technologies, trading volumes have been driven up by the speed at which data is accessed and put to use. Consequently, market participants optimise their strategies for quick returns and become largely disconnected from, or potentially in conflict with, the wider interests of longer-term investors. This is the 'fast finance' problem.

In this new chapter of Slow Finance, Gervais Williams builds on his previous work to further consider the problems and solutions for today's financial markets. He suggests that the debate, which has focused on the computerised algorithms that instigate rapid automated buy or sell orders at remote exchanges, needs to be extended further and a more forward-looking policy that brings the parallel markets together into one physical location to concentrate market volumes, be implemented.

Based on his extensive industry experience Gervais Williams outlines:
§ Market liquidity & stock markets
§ Liquidity changes over recent decades, and the scope to game the system
§ Addressing the problems of high frequency traders
§ The overlooked problem – how markets fragmented geographically during the boom
§ Fostering true market liquidity beyond the credit boom to aid productivity growth

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Market liquidity is an essential feature of the stock market, so investors and corporates can transact as and when it suits them. A key priority for stock market operators is to ensure there are market participants with a wide range of different perspectives, which offer plentiful trading volumes. Stock exchanges need to encourage investors with shorter-term horizons to lubricate the transaction process; the vitality of shorter-term operators is a key part of the success of the whole.

However, in recent times the proliferation of credit has favoured speculative strategies, and along with new technologies, trading volumes have been driven up by the speed at which data is accessed and put to use. Consequently, market participants optimise their strategies for quick returns and become largely disconnected from, or potentially in conflict with, the wider interests of longer-term investors. This is the 'fast finance' problem.

In this new chapter of Slow Finance, Gervais Williams builds on his previous work to further consider the problems and solutions for today's financial markets. He suggests that the debate, which has focused on the computerised algorithms that instigate rapid automated buy or sell orders at remote exchanges, needs to be extended further and a more forward-looking policy that brings the parallel markets together into one physical location to concentrate market volumes, be implemented.

Based on his extensive industry experience Gervais Williams outlines:
§ Market liquidity & stock markets
§ Liquidity changes over recent decades, and the scope to game the system
§ Addressing the problems of high frequency traders
§ The overlooked problem – how markets fragmented geographically during the boom
§ Fostering true market liquidity beyond the credit boom to aid productivity growth

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