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Monday, April 08, 2024 12:57:05 PM
It is common knowledge that AI can (and is IMO) be used to manipulate the market.
I disagree with the author of this paper's initial claim that there is "no evidence yet". I believe the huge pump and dump that occurred during the COVID lock up was a way to get government funds given to people and businesses during that time to gamble in an AI controlled market and channel a lot of those funds back to the Street people. The methods and dangers of AI are well described though.
How AI-powered Collusion in Stock Trading Could Hurt Price Formation
November 10, 2023 • 8 min read
There is no evidence yet of AI collusion hurting the financial markets, but the threat is real, warns a paper co-authored by Wharton’s Winston Wei Dou and Itay Goldstein.
As world leaders last week raised fears over runaway AI on the scale of a nuclear war or a pandemic, a more immediate and tangible frontier may well be the capital markets. The potential for AI technologies in capital markets to cause unintended effects arises when autonomous AI algorithms learn to act in concert automatically, either through a “price-trigger mechanism” that punishes deviations in trading behavior or through homogenized learning biases among algorithms, according to new research by experts at Wharton and elsewhere.
“Informed AI traders can collude and generate substantial profits by strategically manipulating low order flows, even without explicit coordination that violates antitrust regulations,” warned a research paper, titled “AI-Powered Trading, Algorithmic Collusion, and Price Efficiency,” by Wharton finance professors Winston Wei Dou and Itay Goldstein, and Yan Ji, professor of finance at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.
Quantitative hedge funds and leading investment firms like BlackRock and J.P. Morgan are already using AI, and that trend is gathering momentum across the financial markets. The SEC has recently given the green light to Nasdaq’s AI trading system, which utilizes reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms for making real-time adjustments. Wall Street has been clear so far of a scandal over AI-powered abuses, but the threat of that is palpable, according to Dou.
Red Flags on AI in Retailing, Manufacturing
Dou pointed to the Federal Trade Commission’s recent lawsuit accusing Amazon of using a secret algorithm to manipulate prices. “AI collusion in retail markets could drive prices to super-competitive levels as the algorithms learn to achieve and maintain coordination without any form of agreement, communication, or even intention,” he said. “Retailers and manufacturers have an incentive to gain market power without improving their product qualities. That’s why antitrust regulators are very nervous about this.”
Dou said their paper addresses those very concerns. “We have seen the rise of adoption of AI trading in financial markets, so naturally we would ask similar questions — whether AI collusion will arise in the financial markets,” he said. “If that’s the case, the question is whether we will see important adverse real consequences. If there’s AI collusion in the financial markets, market liquidity and price informativeness may be hurt.” Put another way, he said the worry is whether the markets will effectively facilitate liquidity and if market prices will reflect “real fundamental information.”
Goldstein noted that the Amazon case apart, there is an increasing worry of AI collusion in several other markets. “Our main question is whether something like that might be happening or could happen in financial markets. Financial markets generate another type of environment with their own nuances and complications.”
The Broad Reach of Financial Markets
Goldstein said he and his co-authors focused on financial markets for potential bad outcomes of AI-powered collusion because of the broader impact they have. “The way prices are formed in financial markets ends up having a real effect,” he said. “Firms rely on financial markets to a large extent (such as to raise capital), and so we need to understand the price formation process.”
Another reason the paper’s authors picked the financial markets is because of a paucity of research on their specific concerns. “There’s no scientific study on the outcomes and how AI trading would affect the market efficiency, including factors like price informativeness, market liquidity, and mispricing,” Dou said. The authors stated: “Our paper is one of the first few that study how the widespread adoption of AI-powered trading strategies would affect capital markets.”
The paper noted that the “integration of algorithmic trading and reinforcement learning, known as AI-powered trading, has significantly impacted capital markets.” Drawing from that observation, the authors created a virtual laboratory where they could study the effects of collusion between autonomous, self-interested AI trading algorithms. They developed “a model of imperfect competition among informed speculators with asymmetric information to explore the implications of AI-powered trading strategies on informed traders’ market power and price informativeness.”
A Lab to Study AI Behavior
Dou said their laboratory captures in a transparent manner the important features of the real financial market such as information asymmetry, price impact, and price efficiency. Within this laboratory, they ran trading algorithms to study their behavior and assess their influence on market liquidity and the informativeness of prices.
According to the paper, algorithmic collusion arises from two mechanisms: collusion through homogenized learning biases and collusion through punishment threat as in a price-trigger strategy. Biased learning, also known as “artificial stupidity,” arises because of insufficient learning about play at off-the-equilibrium-path information sets. Such learning biases are homogenized among AI traders due to the shared foundational models upon which they are developed. The collusion through the threat of punishment occurs to deter members of a cartel from breaking away, or “deviate from tacitly agreed upon behavior,” Dou explained.
In product markets such as the OPEC oil cartel, members can monitor deviations from agreed-upon behavior by tracking prices and volumes, and then hand out punishments to cartel-breakers such as blocking them from profitable deals. But high-frequency trading in the financial markets makes it difficult to monitor cartel-breakers. That is where AI-powered trading algorithms can learn to automatically trigger penalties for deviant behavior that market prices may reveal, Dou said. “Such collusion will incentivize all AI algorithms to stay within well-behaved trading strategies. No one will trade too aggressively relative to others.”
The upshot of that is that price informativeness will be hurt, due to market manipulation. “In a market with prevalent AI-powered trading, price efficiency and informativeness can be compromised due to both artificial intelligence and stupidity,” the paper noted.
Understanding the Psychology of Machines
In the lab they created, the paper’s authors became detectives looking for ways in which AI-powered trading algorithms might learn to collude without being detected. “What we were looking for is implicit collusion that occurs between machines,” Goldstein said. “They come to behave in a way that is difficult to detect. And that’s what we tried to figure out through this paper.” Added Dou: “The collusion automatically happens, even when each machine is 100% autonomous without any communication or intention of coordination.”
The lab studies showed the conditions under which collusion thrives. “Collusion through punishment threat (artificial intelligence) only exists when price efficiency and information asymmetry are not very high. However, collusion through homogenized learning biases (artificial stupidity) exists even when efficient prices prevail or when information asymmetry is severe,” the paper stated.
In order to study the way collusion among AI-powered trading algorithms can occur, the authors have to understand how machines think, so to speak. “Comprehending the dynamics of capital markets with the prevalence of AI-powered trading algorithms requires insights into algorithmic behavior akin to the ‘psychology’ of machines,” the paper stated.
What the Study Found
The study’s main findings included:
Informed AI speculators can collude and achieve supra-competitive profits by strategically manipulating excessively low order flows, even in the absence of agreement or communication that would constitute an antitrust infringement.
In scenarios where so-called “preferred-habitat investors play a substantial role in price formation, resulting in prices that are not highly efficient, tacit collusion among informed AI-powered speculators can be sustained through the use of price-trigger strategies.” (Preferred-habitat investors are typically long-term and insensitive to new short-run information.)
How effective AI collusion is depends on the level of information asymmetry in the market: To maintain collusion via a price-trigger punishment threat mechanism (artificial intelligence), the level of information asymmetry must not be too extreme, and there should not be an excessive number of informed speculators, conditions that mirror real-world scenarios.
In the scenario with high price efficiency or high information asymmetry, tacit collusion between AI-powered speculators can still be achieved through homogenized learning biases, reflecting artificial stupidity.
Regulators on a Vigil
Regulators are on high alert. Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Gary Gensler recently cautioned against “the possibility of AI destabilizing the global financial market if big tech-based trading companies monopolize AI development and applications within the financial sector,” the paper noted. “[Regulators] have repeatedly highlighted the potential for AI to inadvertently amplify biases that could lurk in their designers, further jeopardizing competition and market efficiency.”
The findings of the paper serve as an early warning signal to both investors and regulators who want to prevent price distortions — and the broader implications of such distortions on the capital markets. But more research is required to draw insights that weigh both the good and bad outcomes of AI power, Goldstein said. “If you want to think about whether overall, AI technologies are helping or hurting the discovery of information through prices, broader investigation is needed for that. Our study brings to light one potential adverse effect.”
https://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/how-ai-powered-collusion-in-stock-trading-could-hurt-price-formation/
Another source...
AI expert warns of algo-based market manipulation Regulators must keep pace with new technology that could be used to control financial markets By Eliot Raman Jones 24 Jan 2024 Tweet Facebook LinkedIn Save this article Send to Print this page “The prospect of supercharged manipulation is likely,” says Michael Wellman, a University of Michigan professor. “We know manipulation is already a very prevalent practice, and so if bodies are doing this, they’re going to try and avail themselves of the latest tools. We would be foolish not to expect to see intentional manipulation enhanced by AI.”
more from the above source at this link:
https://www.risk.net/risk-management/7958887/ai-expert-warns-of-algo-based-market-manipulation
...and another...
AI expert warns of algo-based market manipulation An artificial intelligence professor warns of machine learning ‘arms race’ for regulators against those seeking to use new technologies to manipulate financial markets. By Eliot Raman Jones 23 Jan 2024 Tweet Facebook LinkedIn Save this article Send to Print this page “The prospect of supercharged manipulation is likely. We know that manipulation is already a very prevalent practice and so if bodies are doing this, they’re going to try and avail themselves of the latest tools. We would be foolish not to expect to see intentional manipulation enhanced by AI.” So says Michael Wellman, a University of Michigan professor who earned his PhD in artificial intelligence from MIT in 1988 and has spent his career researching AI and its applications in economics.
https://www.waterstechnology.com/regulation/7951639/ai-expert-warns-of-algo-based-market-manipulation
...and another...
This Article offers a novel perspective on the implications of increasingly autonomous and “black box” algorithms, within the ramification of algorithmic trading, for the integrity of capital markets. Artificial intelligence (AI) and particularly its subfield of machine learning (ML) methods have gained immense popularity among the great public and achieved tremendous success in many real-life applications by leading to vast efficiency gains. In the financial trading domain, ML can augment human capabilities in price prediction, dynamic portfolio optimization, and other financial decision-making tasks. However, thanks to constant
progress in the ML technology, the prospect of increasingly capable and autonomous agents to delegate operational tasks and even decision-making is now beyond mere imagination, thus opening up the possibility for approximating (truly) autonomous trading agents anytime soon.
Given these spectacular developments, this Article argues that such autonomous algorithmic traders may involve significant risks to market integrity, independent from their human experts, thanks to self-learning capabilities offered by state-of-the-art and innovative ML methods. Using the proprietary trading industry as a case study, we explore emerging threats to the application of established market abuse laws in the event of algorithmic market abuse, by taking an interdisciplinary stance between financial regulation, law and economics, and computational finance. Specifically, our analysis focuses on two emerging market abuse risks by autonomous algorithms: market manipulation and “tacit” collusion. We explore their likelihood to arise in global capital markets and evaluate related social harm as forms of market failures.
With these new risks in mind, this Article questions the adequacy of existing regulatory frameworks and enforcement mechanisms, as well as current legal rules on the governance of algorithmic trading, to cope with increasingly autonomous and ubiquitous algorithmic trading systems. We demonstrate how the “black box” nature of specific ML-powered algorithmic trading strategies can subvert existing market abuse laws, which are based upon traditional liability concepts and tests (such as “intent” and “causation”). We conclude by addressing the shortcomings of the present legal framework and develop a number of guiding principles to assist legal and policy reform in the spirit of promoting and safeguarding market integrity and safety.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2035&context=jil
I could go on and on ... but it is clear from these samples that this is a very real threat to the integrity of the market.
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