Are There Always Winners and Losers When Trading?

Are There Always Winners and Losers When Trading?

#210 Why fair markets require uncertainty for both the buyer and the seller, and why sellers don't need to disclose everything they know to the buyer. More information, including show notes, can be found here. Thanks to Wunder Capital for sponsoring this week's episode.

Episode Summary

A recent listener of the Money For the Rest of Us podcast posed the question, “Are there always winners and losers when trading?” This question is the focus of this episode of the podcast. David explains an age-old thought experiment created by Cicero and how it relates to modern financial decision making. The key differences between concealing and simply not revealing information are discussed and how trading decisions can be ethical for all involved. David also explains how high-frequency trading bots exist outside the parameters of conscious decision making and how they can impact market volatility. It’s an episode full of great insights and should not be missed, so be sure to listen.

There’s a key difference between concealing and not revealing information

In Cicero’s thought experiment, there is a grain seller that has imported foreign goods during a period of domestic hardship. Is the seller required to disclose information of additional shipments coming into the market soon? Or is he able to sell his stores at a higher price, without telling the buyers what he knows? David explains that technically it would be an ethical sale since there’s not a defect in the grain he’s selling. The seller isn’t concealing critical information, he’s simply using the current market conditions to his benefit. To hear David’s full summary of this scenario, be sure to listen to this episode.

The outcome of a transaction should be unknown for all parties involved in order to be ethical

Simply put, the outcome for any transaction must be equally unknown to all parties involved in order to be considered ethical. David explains by saying, “If they (buyers and sellers) go in not knowing exactly what's going to happen, and there isn't a defect that is being concealed, then that's just how markets work.”

These schools of thought differ between normal commerce and financial markets

In normal commerce, where a buyer purchases a product from a seller at a specific price point, there is an exchange of currency and value. The buyer loses money but gains function and value from the product. The seller reaps financial benefits from the transaction. Even if the seller then drops the price, it’s ethical because there wasn’t a defect in the product at the original price point. For financial markets, there generally will be a winner and loser because the price WILL change. The key is both buyers and sellers go into the transaction with a level of uncertainty.

How could high-frequency trading bots influence market volatility?

In this episode of Money For the Rest of Us, David also explains how high-frequency trading bots can increase market volatility, or the level of risk involved in transactions. Human traders have a point of view, a position, and a set of moral ethics. Bots based on algorithms do not. That’s why when “shocks of unknown origin” crop up in the market, most bots will simply sell or back out entirely. This can result in a negative feedback loop leading to even less liquidity from high-frequency traders and multiple flash crashes. David says that “There is a risk of higher volatility because here markets have changed. Most trading in stocks is no longer an investor with a fundamental view. It's an algorithm, and we could have more downside when the next bear market comes along.”

Episode Chronology

[0:44] Discussing the idea of “winners and losers” in investing and financial markets

[4:45] Is full market disclosure recommended? Is keeping some information private immoral?

[10:35] The difference between concealing and not revealing information

[13:17] This is why laws come and go, but ethics stay

[16:04] The outcome of a transaction should be unknown for all parties involved in order to be ethical

[19:10] Why could high-frequency traders (bots) increase market volatility?

[24:33] The difference between value and knowledge in normal commerce and financial markets

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Episoder(572)

Money for the Rest of Us Update

Money for the Rest of Us Update

This week there isn’t a regular Money for the Rest of Us episode, but David shares an update on what’s happening behind the scenes. He previews an exclusive Plus member livestream on the forces shapin...

24 Sep 20256min

Resilient Wealth in an Era of Infinite Money

Resilient Wealth in an Era of Infinite Money

What happens when the money supply grows too slowly or too quickly? From gold-standard deflation to QE-driven inflation and inequality, we trace the lessons of monetary history, and what we can do tod...

17 Sep 202525min

Forests, Fakes, and the Fight for the Real

Forests, Fakes, and the Fight for the Real

From salmon leaping along the Vancouver Island coast to fake bands on Spotify, this episode explores the divide between the physical and digital economy, and what lumber markets, managed forests, and ...

10 Sep 202522min

Why Central Banking Is So Hard and Why Fed Independence Matters

Why Central Banking Is So Hard and Why Fed Independence Matters

Central bankers set policy with incomplete information, unobservable targets, and constant trade-offs between growth, inflation, and employment. In this episode, we delve into how the fight for Federa...

27 Aug 202524min

How To Invest During a Bubble

How To Invest During a Bubble

From the dot-com boom to today’s AI frenzy, bubbles follow a familiar script. This episode explores how to recognize them, what sustains them, and how to position your portfolio without getting swept ...

20 Aug 202521min

Six Principles for Thriving Under Uncertainty and How Big Tech Is Doing the Opposite

Six Principles for Thriving Under Uncertainty and How Big Tech Is Doing the Opposite

A practical framework for making better decisions, managing risk, and finding opportunity in unpredictable environments. We contrast these principles with the massive $2.9 trillion AI data center buil...

13 Aug 202525min

Why Most Hedge Funds Fail but This One Didn’t with Dave Thomas

Why Most Hedge Funds Fail but This One Didn’t with Dave Thomas

Dave Thomas, CIO and Founder of long/short hedge fund, Atalan Capital Partners, shares why most hedge funds fail and the keys to being a long-term successful investor.Episode SponsorDelete Me – Use co...

6 Aug 202539min

How To Better Navigate Money, Risk, Time, and Uncertainty with Carl Richards

How To Better Navigate Money, Risk, Time, and Uncertainty with Carl Richards

David converses with renowned illustrator and financial philosopher Carl Richards on the abstraction of money, attention capital, distinguishing risk from uncertainty, and the importance of taking mic...

30 Jul 202538min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
dine-penger-pengeradet
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
pengepodden-2
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
pengesnakk
finansredaksjonen
utbytte
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
rss-politisk-preik
lederpodden
liberal-halvtime
rss-pa-konto
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
rss-sunn-okonomi
rss-markedspuls-2