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by kasey_junk 4293 days ago
If you are interested in the topic of HFT, 'Flash Boys' might literally be the worst introduction to the industry you could read. It is rife with bias and technical incorrectness. Worse than that it is disjointed and plain poorly written (and a fair chunk of it appeared in Vanity Fair which is available online).

I have my own problems with 'Dark Pools' by Patterson, it does have some technical inaccuracy, but on the whole it paints a picture that is closer to reality and is still readable.

1 comments

Any other suggestions for reading materials on this? Sounds like slightly faint praise for Dark Pools.
If what you are looking for is "narrative" non-fiction, Flash Boys and Dark Pools sort of own the corner. Of the two, Dark Pools is much better. In general, it is hard to tell a good narrative around HFT because it is so technical.

Trading & Exchanges by Harris is dated but will give you an introduction into market microstructure, keep in mind it was written before RegNMS.

If you want a good set of blog posts, Chris Stucchio (yummyfajitas) has an intro series that is great on his blog: http://www.chrisstucchio.com/blog/2012/hft_apology.html

Reading TCP/IP Illustrated won't teach you how to configure BGP prefix filtering regexes on a Cisco router, but the background sure is helpful. Harris is similarly helpful (and in a bunch of weird ways, similarly constructed and written) for understanding financial technology. I do software security consulting for large financial technology companies, and if you ever want to get one of their developers head's nodding, mention an example from Harris.

It's weird that more nerds on HN haven't read it. It's a great book, and it's great in a very nerdy, systems-y way.