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An article in today's NYT:
It's no contest. It's similar to a human player -- even a grandmaster -- facing the latest generation of computer engines (say Rybka 3). The humans can't contest the brute calculating power the engines have and that power trumps even the advantage in judgement and assessment the humans may have. The edge of calculating power becomes even stronger at quicker time controls. Even Kasparov will be outplayed in a five- or ten-minute game.
The problem is that stocks aren’t bodies and their motion is subject to forces Newton could never have fathomed. Some of those forces are hard for the Today Trader duo to fathom, too. Mr. Gomez says that day trading has become far trickier in recent years because of the rise of robo trading — the use of computers to automatically buy and sell huge numbers of shares in superfast bursts, based on algorithms.
Big, muscular Wall Street veterans like Goldman Sachs have the money, smarts and brute power to dominate this computerized battle, and many day traders may not even be aware how outgunned they now are.
About the most Mr. Bettinger will say about day trading is that it’s a “tough gig.” “You’re competing against mega-institutions that are trading in hundredths of a second.”
It's no contest. It's similar to a human player -- even a grandmaster -- facing the latest generation of computer engines (say Rybka 3). The humans can't contest the brute calculating power the engines have and that power trumps even the advantage in judgement and assessment the humans may have. The edge of calculating power becomes even stronger at quicker time controls. Even Kasparov will be outplayed in a five- or ten-minute game.