The only real-world impact may have been some panic attacks and heart palpitations.
The UTP QDF provides only BBO (best bid/offer). I highly doubt anyone is using this for trading or modeling. That's done using other feeds that can be used to compile books of greater depth.The only real-world impact may have been some panic attacks and heart palpitations.
I wouldn't bet on it. Most of the market today is not people, but competing machine-learning algorithms. Unless the human programmers go in and purge this data, it could easily influence all sorts of internal models in unpredictable ways.
Can we get an update if anyone tries to file a lawsuit against NASDAQ for emotional trama. My guess is they'll be at least 25 notable suits filed in the next two weeks.
Can we get an update if anyone tries to file a lawsuit against NASDAQ for emotional trama. My guess is they'll be at least 25 notable suits filed in the next two weeks.
Now all we need are some enterprising lawyers willing to file for emotional distress on behalf of an algorithm. If there's a buck to be made....I wouldn't bet on it. Most of the market today is not people, but competing machine-learning algorithms. Unless the human programmers go in and purge this data, it could easily influence all sorts of internal models in unpredictable ways.
The only real-world impact may have been some panic attacks and heart palpitations.
I wouldn't bet on it. Most of the market today is not people, but competing machine-learning algorithms. Unless the human programmers go in and purge this data, it could easily influence all sorts of internal models in unpredictable ways.
A LOT of the algos are using Twitter and other social media as an input so the fact that the pricing got out into those outlets could cause a bit of a problem.The UTP QDF provides only BBO (best bid/offer). I highly doubt anyone is using this for trading or modeling. That's done using other feeds that can be used to compile books of greater depth.The only real-world impact may have been some panic attacks and heart palpitations.
I wouldn't bet on it. Most of the market today is not people, but competing machine-learning algorithms. Unless the human programmers go in and purge this data, it could easily influence all sorts of internal models in unpredictable ways.
It looks bad, but was of little danger.
Did a small web app for Nasdaq, not super surprised. Making minor front end css only changes required an approval process 7 people and 2 countries long, often passing technical description through decidedly non-technical people with the direction that ultimately came back often only casually resembling the initial request.
Edit: I realize that they're blaming the vendors, but to me this sounds like a communication problem; it just seems unlikely that if the test was clearly communicated that so many different outlets would have erroneously published test data.
The more I learn about the markets, the more I'm convinced that the guys running it are inept morons.
The only real-world impact may have been some panic attacks and heart palpitations.
I wouldn't bet on it. Most of the market today is not people, but competing machine-learning algorithms. Unless the human programmers go in and purge this data, it could easily influence all sorts of internal models in unpredictable ways.
To be fair. If a failure is going to happen, it's going to be there.I realize this was a planned and announced test, but I still can't help but thinking of this:
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I work for one of the big 3 multinational data vendors.
...
Bloomberg, FactSet, and/or Thompson-Reuters
The more I learn about the markets, the more I'm convinced that the guys running it are inept morons.
As TFA said, and as has been pointed out a few times in the comments, already, this wasn't Nasdaq's fault.
Bloomberg and whatever other data vendors released it to the public are the ones to blame.
The change control processes around everything in the financial industry are nuts. I know. I work for one of the big 3 multinational data vendors. This stuff is pretty well-communicated and there's plenty of advance notice given. The fact this happened at all can probably be traced back to one or two people at each organization that let it leak who were supposed to have thrown some sort of switch before the test, but didn't because they ducked out of the office early for the holiday and were on the road or something.
And I'm sure they got paged and had a stern postmortem with their superiors and half their department, once it was over.
Of all the things that could go wrong in all these systems, this was probably one of the "best" things that could have gone wrong while still being client-facing. Much less destructive to real dollars than an outright outage or bad data during market hours.
And this is also one of the reasons why most investment bankers don't just rely on a single platform to do their jobs. Many IB firms have a mix of Bloomberg, FactSet, and/or Thompson-Reuters workstations for the various strengths each platform has.
Good to know we're all inept morons, though. Nice to have a reality check from time to time...