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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Robots Are Coming for Wall Street
When Daniel Nadler woke on Nov. 6, he had just enough time to pour himself a glass of orange juice and open his laptop before the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its monthly employment report at 8:30 a.m. He sat at the kitchen table in his one-bedroom apartment in Chelsea, nervously refreshing his web browser Command-R, Command-R, Command-R as the software of his company, Kensho, scraped the data from the bureaus website. Within two minutes, an automated Kensho analysis popped up on his screen: a brief overview, followed by 13 exhibits predicting the performance of investments based on their past response to similar employment reports.
Nadler couldnt have double-checked all this analysis if he wanted to. It was based on thousands of numbers drawn from dozens of databases. He just wanted to make sure that Kensho had pulled the right number the overall growth in American payrolls from the employment report. It was the least he could do, given that within minutes, at 8:35 a.m., Kenshos analysis would be made available to employees at Goldman Sachs.
In addition to being a customer, Goldman is also Kenshos largest investor. Nadler, who is 32, spent the rest of the morning checking in with some of the banks most regular Kensho users a top executive on the options-and-derivatives-trading desks, a fund manager then took an Uber down for a lunch meeting at Goldmans glass tower just off the West Side Highway in Manhattan. While almost everyone in the building dresses in neatly pressed work attire, Nadler rarely deviates from his standard outfit: Louis Vuitton leather sandals and a casual but well-cut T-shirt and pants, both by the designer Alexander Wang. Nadler owns 10 sets of these. His austere aesthetic is informed by the summer vacations he spent in Japan while pursuing a doctoral degree in economics from Harvard, mostly visiting temples and meditating. (Kensho is the Japanese term for one of the first states of awareness in the Zen Buddhist progression.) He also wrote a volume of poetry imagined ancient love poems that Farrar Straus & Giroux will publish later this year.
Snip
Nadler closed his laptop. The whole process had taken just a few minutes. Generating a similar query without automation, he said, would have taken days, probably 40 man-hours, from people who were making an average of $350,000 to $500,000 a year.
Nadler couldnt have double-checked all this analysis if he wanted to. It was based on thousands of numbers drawn from dozens of databases. He just wanted to make sure that Kensho had pulled the right number the overall growth in American payrolls from the employment report. It was the least he could do, given that within minutes, at 8:35 a.m., Kenshos analysis would be made available to employees at Goldman Sachs.
In addition to being a customer, Goldman is also Kenshos largest investor. Nadler, who is 32, spent the rest of the morning checking in with some of the banks most regular Kensho users a top executive on the options-and-derivatives-trading desks, a fund manager then took an Uber down for a lunch meeting at Goldmans glass tower just off the West Side Highway in Manhattan. While almost everyone in the building dresses in neatly pressed work attire, Nadler rarely deviates from his standard outfit: Louis Vuitton leather sandals and a casual but well-cut T-shirt and pants, both by the designer Alexander Wang. Nadler owns 10 sets of these. His austere aesthetic is informed by the summer vacations he spent in Japan while pursuing a doctoral degree in economics from Harvard, mostly visiting temples and meditating. (Kensho is the Japanese term for one of the first states of awareness in the Zen Buddhist progression.) He also wrote a volume of poetry imagined ancient love poems that Farrar Straus & Giroux will publish later this year.
Snip
Nadler closed his laptop. The whole process had taken just a few minutes. Generating a similar query without automation, he said, would have taken days, probably 40 man-hours, from people who were making an average of $350,000 to $500,000 a year.
Snip
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/28/magazine/the-robots-are-coming-for-wall-street.html
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The Robots Are Coming for Wall Street (Original Post)
LiberalArkie
Mar 2016
OP
ghostsinthemachine
(3,569 posts)1. The NYSE is basically a series of TV studio sets.
nobody goes there any more, the bots are running the world.
longship
(40,416 posts)2. Read "Flash Boys" by Michael Lewis
For a deep, dark look into high volume trading, a trigger point for economic meltdown.
LiberalArkie
(15,728 posts)3. I highly recommend Daemon and Freedom(tm) by Daniel Suarez.
He really has it pegged really on everything going on. He even had at the end of Freedom the elites all at a large private west Texas ranch where they were partying while they caused to world economic meltdown.