Wars and viruses: Are robots less prone to panic?
Send a link to a friend
[January 31, 2020] By
Saikat Chatterjee
LONDON (Reuters) - Widely blamed for
volatile "flash crashes" in currencies and equities, high-frequency
algorithms may also be why shock global events, including the current
coronavirus, seem to have lost their power to spook markets for any
length of time.
Whether stocks, bonds, currencies or commodities, asset prices seem less
prone to any selloff for very long; the U.S. killing of an Iranian
general and Iran's retaliatory missile attack are among potential
catastrophes that triggered violent but surprisingly shortlived
reactions just since the start of 2020.
In both cases, knee-jerk yen-buying and selling of equities faded within
hours, allowing stocks to scale new record peaks.
Now even as China's coronavirus threatens to throttle economic growth,
global stocks are not far off all-time highs.
Certainly, many factors are shaping the resilience, not least central
bank money printing and rising global savings which boosted the value of
world stocks by $25 trillion in the past decade.
Yet it is hard not to link the shift in reaction by financial markets to
the rise of automated trading strategies. In the past six years, the
share of algo-trading in the $6.6 trillion-a-day FX market has more than
doubled to 27% among fund managers, a survey by Greenwich Associates
found.
There is some reason to believe algos cause volatility, especially when
trading thins and the humans overseeing them vanish, for instance during
public holidays. That's what likely happened during the Wall Street
flash crash of 2010 and dramatic but fleeting yen moves in Jan 2019.
But they also offer the advantage of being able to transact at
lightening speed at any hour of the day or night, with razor-sharp
accuracy and lower overall costs. Being machines, they are also alien to
the common human impulses of fear and greed that tend to take over.
"Human trading tends to be emotional but machine trading is very
dispassionate," said Scott Wacker, global head of fixed income, currency
and commodity e-sales at JPMorgan, one bank at the forefront of the algo
revolution.
"As a result, the reaction functions in currency markets to even major
geopolitical news has considerably shortened."
In short, when left-field events hit, not only can algos scan and react
swiftly to newsfeed, many now can gauge the potential asset price
impact. The most sophisticated can be "trained" to learn from the
experience before the next shock.
One currency trader familiar with algo use said a machine reading
coronavirus cases would typically buy stocks if informed of "500 new
cases, 10 deaths". "If it's '3000 new cases, 200 deaths' they might
sell.
"The point being that as soon as a headline is out, the machine-led
market is trading on it," the trader said, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
But the machines had 'vol triggers', he said, meaning they can stop
trading when the market moves beyond specified limits.
Graphic: Market value wipe off on Jan 27 after coronavirus outbreak -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/buzzifr/15/5967/5967/Pasted%20Image.jpg
HOW IT WORKS
Simple first- and second-generation programs merely broke down large
buy/sell orders into chunks to minimize market impact. Now algos can be
hooked up to sophisticated language processing technology, to "read and
analyze" news feeds, then react accordingly, all in the space of
seconds, said Antony Foster, head of G10 FX trading at Nomura.
However this can "lead to overreaction in the first instance", Foster
warned.
The impact in fast-moving markets can be outsized if the models rapidly
push prices towards existing buy/sell order levels, trip them and
trigger other orders.
[to top of second column] |
File image of the U.S. Nasdaq Composite stock market index from
April 1, 2011. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
That's what happened when news broke of Iran's Jan. 8 attack, according to a
quant fund manager, who said algos had bought yen with the aim of triggering
larger buy orders once a key option barrier was tripped.
A plausible comparison may be the 0.6% plunge in the S&P 500 <.SPX> within the
space of half an hour on Jan. 29. The move came after American Airlines <AAL.O>
and Lufthansa <LHAG.DE> said they were suspending their China flights, but an
hour later, the losses had been recouped.
Graphic: S&P 500 crash after airlines suspend flights to China -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/buzzifr/15/5966/5966/SP500%20crash%20after%20airlines%20suspend%20flight%20-%20Copy.png
Stephane Malrait, ING Bank's head of market structure and innovation, says in
such instances algos are programmed to check if moves are in line with price
trends.
If the swings are in response to the an incident, human traders can step in to
smooth out the trade, Malrait added.
Next, the algos may gauge the seriousness of the incident based on patterns of
investor behavior and economic consequences that followed previous such
episodes.
After the Iran missile attacks, the message from the specialized data-crunchers
to the algos was: stand down.
One was Geoquant, a U.S. firm which monitors geopolitical events and models the
asset price impact.
"We modeled our Iranian geopolitical indicator back to seven years... and put
the current tensions against that backdrop," said Geoquant CEO Mark Rosenberg,
who concluded the risk would subside, with minimal oil price impact.
Another firm, Predata, applied its machine-reading algorithm to last September's
attacks on Saudi oil facilities, which had raised fears of a regional war.
To predict what might happen next, the program compares interested parties'
online attention to a subject, with the media coverage it receives, Predata CEO
Hazem Dawani said. The Saudi event elicited little reaction from military
officials and policymakers.
"The amount of news was far more than the amount of attention being devoted on
the particular subject by investors, politicians, companies directly impacted by
them," Dawani said.
He concluded - rightly - that there would be no escalation.
VIRUS UNKNOWNS
Executives at half a dozen firms providing risk analysis for algo strategies
told Reuters their services were increasingly in demand, but declined to give
figures.
But they acknowledged limitations.
Reactions to the coronavirus for instance could be hobbled because the only
meaningful precedent is the 2003 SARS epidemic which also coincided with the
U.S. invasion of Iraq. Second, the pathogen and its dangers are relatively
unknown.
Rosenberg said Geoquant's China Health Risk index was at record highs. That has
pushed up the firm's Social Instability Risk index for China, pressuring Chinese
markets.
However, he said this correlation breaks down beyond short periods.
"The longer-term relationship between Chinese Health Risk and equities, Chinese
or global, is basically zero," he said.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; additional reporting by Thyagaraju Adinarayan;
editing by Sujata Rao and Susan Fenton)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |