Ninety minutes before the end of the trading day
today, the U.S. stock market almost melted down. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average dropped nearly 1,000 points. The market regained ground before
the end, like a giant 747 narrowly averting a crash landing, but the
questions of the day are: What happened? And What does it mean?
At this point no one knows why. Some say it was sudden burst of
worries about Greece's debt and the increasing possibility of a default
that might cause a run by global investors. Others point to a "trading
error." Giant high-speed computers generate millions of trade based on
instructions embedded in computer programs designed to move fast enough
to beat everyone else. So when there's a glitch in one of them it can
immediately spread to all the other programs designed to move just as
fast. Some say it was an erroneous trade entered by someone at a big
Wall Street bank who mistyped an order to sell a large block of stock,
and that the big drop in that stock's price (Procter & Gamble?)
triggered "sell" orders across the market.
Regardless of why it happened, it's further evidence that the
nation's and the world's capital markets have become a vast
out-of-control casino in which fortunes can be made or lost in an
instant -- which would be fine except for the fact that most of us have
put our life savings there. Pension funds, mutual funds, school
endowments -- the value of all of this depends on a mechanism that can
lose a trillion dollars in minutes without anyone having a clear idea
why.
So much of the market now depends on computer programs and
mathematical models that no one fully understands, so much trading is in
the hands of a few people whose fat thumbs or momentary carelessness
might sink the economy, so much of global wealth now depends on who can
move their money quickest at the slightest provocation -- that we are
toying with financial disaster every day. The luck or foolishness of a
few traders, and inside knowledge and information that some possess and
others don't, combined with ultra high-speed computers, put us all at
the whim of a system whose risk is way out of proportion to any public
benefits.
The financial reforms being considered on Capitol Hill are steps in
the right direction. But the "systemic risk" now embedded in our capital
markets is higher than ever, and will require far greater understanding
and vigilance than now being considered.
Robert Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor and Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, has a new film, "Inequality for All," to be released September 27. He blogs at www.robertreich.org.