Longreads + Open Thread

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Longreads

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Books

Why Aren't They Shouting?: A Banker’s Tale of Change, Computers and Perpetual Crisis: Trading floors are much quieter and better-behaved environments than they're usually depicted in movies and books—a lot less swashbuckling, a lot more IT project management. Why Aren't They Shouting is basically a narrative around those IT projects, specifically as they pertain to making FX trading electronic rather than voice-based.There's more to it than just that, but the common thread in the book is that finance is a data- and compute-intensive industry, and the efficient frontier is often determined by what computers are capable of. Early on, he talks about "triangle man,"—not a They Might Be Giants reference, but a trader who was preternaturally good at finding cases where swapping currency A for B for C back to A could turn a profit. Computers were a bit better at this.

An ongoing occurrence in the book is that the bank will come up with a more sophisticated risk system, either one that's more real-time or that has a more coherent sense of how different trades offset one another, and the newly-confident bank can make bigger trades as a result. And then, every so often, those correlations will suddenly shift because everyone's seen the same historical relationships and made the same hedging trades, and when they all unwind these trades at once the correlation veers from positive to negative and red ink abounds.

One of the most interesting digressions in the book is when the author talks about what drove banks to take such big risks, and argues that it wasn't greed. He points out that, while he's obviously biased, he's also uniquely well-informed, because part of his job was to pay his traders a) enough that they'd keep making money for the bank, but b) other than that, as little as possible. He was basically a full-time researcher of human motivation as it pertains to risk-taking, and he argues that some traders were motivated by more raw competitiveness than financial compensation, and others were motivated by the fun of inventing a new financial product and then putting it to work. (On the other hand, if you just care about competing, you could probably retire and spend all your time training for marathons, and if you just care about novelty you could retire and write a play or get really into recreational math—clearly, the prospect of making millions of dollars has some impact on what traders do.)

This is a great book to read if you're worried about AI taking your job and leaving you penniless, because over the course of the author's career, computers did indeed repeatedly take his job, but he wound up with plenty of pennies in the end. But that wasn't at all a passive process—he had to constantly ask himself what could be automated, and what he'd do with his very expensive-to-the-bank time once it was. And repeatedly answering that question is enough to keep someone busy throughout a long and interesting career.

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