Cyber enemies could use a range of new battlefield tactics to try to cripple financial markets, from destroying the course of banking and trade settlement transactions to using poison pill algorithms to flood markets with bad data and fake trades in order to
drive trading volatility and market collapse.
Not exact matches
But when
volatility persists for a very long time, especially when it's very
driven by news, eventually people will start to sit out of the market, and when that happens then there's no new money coming into the market, and eventually
trade volumes start to fall off.
WSJ's Telis Demos: «A surge on Wall Street stock -
trading desks is being
driven by manic investor moves in derivatives, as fund managers scramble to protect their gains from future
volatility.
Continued
trade tensions
drove elevated levels of market
volatility throughout the month, as the U.S. / China tariff exchange continued to unfold.
Before late January injected a surge of
volatility into equities,
driven by investor fears over a handful of factors including rising rates, tightening monetary policy, more regulation on big tech and rising global
trade tensions, investors were smooth sailing on the nine - year bull market.
However, high - frequency
trading (HFT) algorithms
driven by super computers move massive volume in just milliseconds, which increases
volatility.
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volatility
Investors can invest and
trade in cryptocurrencies; however, many of them dislike the
volatility associated with them — especially when there is an event that
drives the prices toward the bottom, like the recent Chinese regulations on bitcoin exchanges and ICOs.
Since the Asian markets
drive nearly two - thirds of the
trades in cryptocurrencies, we don't expect this
volatility to end anytime soon.
Bitcoin's recent uptrend has been
driven by more than just technicals; it has been accompanied by renewed
volatility in equities after President Trump signaled his readiness for a
trade war over commodities.