In just a few minutes, investors were given a taste of what could go wrong in today's world
where high frequency trading is responsible for ~ 50 % of all daily trades.
Not exact matches
Review: Scott Patterson argues that
high -
frequency trading has turned the entire stock market into one big dark pool
where only the algorithms know what's going on.
Likewise it's hard to see any justification for
high -
frequency trading,
where stocks are held for mere milliseconds, and the speed of light between the trader's and the market's computers is significant.
What if you could find good value stocks in a market
where the price was dictated by the financial results, not market «sentiment», momentum traders, short sellers,
high frequency trading programs or what a butterfly did in Shanghai?
Keynes was not investing in a world dominated by index ETFs and
high -
frequency trading,
where equity correlations are approaching 1.
However, this has not been the approach taken by the EU IPO, or indeed the UK IPO or English
High Court2, which have preferred the multifactorial analysis approach taken in the 2012 CJEU decision of Leno3
where the CJEU stated that «territorial borders of the Member States should be disregarded in the assessment of whether a
trade mark has been put to «genuine use in the Community»... taking account of all the relevant facts and circumstances, including the characteristics of the market concerned, the nature of the goods or services protected by the
trade mark and the territorial extent and the scale of the use as well as its
frequency and regularity».