by Clifford Asness, Ph. D. AQR Capital Management, Inc.
Somehow I still naively think after we write something weâre pretty sure weâre both right and reasonable about, that the discourse will change in our direction, even slightly. I know, arrogant and solipsistic.
Hereâs a quick example of this belief being utterly and repeatedly shattered.
People are still writing crapola like this about high-frequency trading (recall we are not high-frequency traders, we just think they make our trading cheaper, and thus our clients better off). 1 In particular, while seeking to hedge themselves (âThis isnât to say that in the good old days we didnât have big swings.â), commentators make the same implicit mistake so many do. They casually assume that because todayâs system isnât perfect, and it isnât, that yesterdayâs was better. 2 It just wasnât. Yesterday's system was much more expensive on average, crashes still occurred, and human market-makers still didnât throw their bodies and wallets in front of those crashes to stop them by buying at higher than market prices.
But, then again, Iâve already said this a few times. 3
Here in the Wall Street Journal
But, Iâm now certain that with this latest missive, Iâve finally put this stuff to bed for good!
Copyright © AQR Capital