Felix Stalder on Mon, 10 Feb 97 16:47 MET |
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nettime: Financial Networks as Networks |
Dear Net-timers, The following is a paper that I wrote in the context of my involvement in the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto. I post here only an excerpt [the introduction and the 'conclusion'] because the whole paper is about 25 pages. If anyone is interested, I can provide the full text upon request. Felix ------------------- ãThe two great inventions of the human mind are writing and moneyöthe common language of intelligence and the common language of self-interest.ä Mirabeau 1. Introduction Karl Marx wrote in Grundrisse, Foundations of a Critique of Political Economy (1857): ãMoney as medium of circulation becomes coin, mere vanishing moment, mere symbol of value it exchanges. ... As the most superficial (in the sense of driven out onto the surface) and the most abstract form of the entire production process [money circulation] is in itself quite without content.ä In this sense, money circulation is a Îpure mediumâ, much as light was a pure medium in the eyes of Marshall McLuhan, a medium without content. The underlying thesis of this short paper is that financial networks offer a uniquely transparent view on the dynamics of networks in their pure form. The nature of networks itself becomes visible in the workings of the financial markets. The financial markets are, unlike any other aspect of todayâs economy or culture, completely embedded in computer networks, many of itâs instrument are unthinkable in any other media environment. Their phenomenal growth over the last two decades is a direct result of the power created by the linking of high-end computational hard- and software with nearly unlimited, or at least abundant, telecommunicational bandwidth . The area of electronic money can serve as an empirical testing ground to discern patterns that will be more difficult so see in other areas where they are likely to be Îdistortedâ as they form combinations with patterns of other environments, their different natures and modes of structuring. The goal of this paper is mainly to test a number of speculations and to present preliminary results. The first section will sketch the origins and the present state of the financial markets , the second section will describe some of its mechanisms and the tools employed and the final section will interpret the findings in the light of their Înetworknessâ, it will try to abstract from the empirical evidence, an analysis of the inherent culture of networks. [sections two and three available upon request] 4. The nature of networks 4.1. Networks as environment Financial networks provide their own complete environment. They are content and context at the same time. The surrounding larger social and economic environment is structurally separated and its relevance is relevance is assesed regarding whether it has the ability to invade the closed universe of the financial market, for example in form of new that are regarded as important. But which information is important and which is not is decided within the markets and has nothing to do with the Îvalueâ of the information as such. The context of the market defines the content of the information. If everyone expects a company, or a country, to report huge losses, then the news of moderate losses can boost the price or currency, in contrast, if everyone expects the opposite then the same piece of information can have a devastating influence on the market value. As a complete environment the (financial) networks are fully self-referential, or to quote Marshall McLuhan: ãNew media are not bridges between man and nature, they are nature." Everything that counts is what happens within the networks. What are the other participants doing? Since the direct connection to other environments, or subsystems, is broken, the ultimate determination takes place within the markets themselves. Evidently, the markets react very fast on new information and the connection to political and economic events is almost immediate. Nevertheless, it is indirect. The markets as a closed system react on news because its active elements, the dealers, expect each other to react and try to react before the others. What the others plan to do is the most important information. John M. Keynes described this structure is his famous beauty contest analogy: ãProfessional investment be likened to those newspaper competitions in which the competitors have to pick out the six prettiest faces from a hundred photographs, the prize being awarded to the competitor whose choice most nearly corresponds to the average preferences of the competitors as a whole; so that each competitor has to pick, not those faces he finds himself the prettiest, but those which he thinks likeliest to catch the fancy of the other competitors, all of whom are looking at the problem from the same point of view. it is not the case of choosing those which, to the best of oneâs judgment, are really the prettiest, not even those which average opinion genuinely thinks the prettiest. We have reached the third degree, where we devote our intelligence to anticipating what average opinion expects average opinion to be. And there are some, I believe, who practice the fourth, fifth and higher degrees.ä 4.2. Face value and cooperation Information has to be taken at face value. Its reality is as flat as the screen where the data is displayed, its only relation is to other facets of the same flatness, the other screen to which every screen is connected. What makes the information different is the speed of their circulation. In such an environment news and rumors become equally important. And sometime rumors become even more important than news, since they promise to predict what might be news tomorrow to everyone. And that is the most valuable information and can actually become the cause of tomorrowâs news. If some of the major dealers expect a currency to loose value, they will start to sell it, which will be seen be others as a sign that the value of this currency is falling and the result is that, if many start to sell, the value of the currency is actually sinking. For Jean Baudrillard this reversal in the relationship of sign and object is the principal characteristic of post-modernity. In his sombre prose he analyzes that the simulation is no longer Îrepresentational imaginaryâ ãrather, genetic miniaturisation is the dimension of simulation. The real is produced from miniaturised units, from matrices, memory banks and command models ... It no longer has to be rational, since it is no longer measured against some ideal or negative instance. It is nothing more than operational.ä At first hand strange and unenvisioned in the gloomy metaphors of Baudrillard, the effect of that reversal is cooperation. Since networks are tools and environment at the same time, everyone who uses the tools has a certain need to maintain the environment . This does not imply any idyll, the cooperation is only on the level of the environment, and not within the environment. There are exceptions to this rule, evidently. Networks function efficiently when information can actually be taken at face value. To guarantee this they have to be structurally separated from other environments. In this regard the institution of the clearinghouse can be read as a one trillion dollar per day cooperative buffer against the invasion of external context. The clearinghouse provides the world economyâs most substantial resources, ultimately the funds of the most relevant firms in the markets, to guarantee the constant flow within the networks, uninterrupted by external defaults which would be translated directly into the network and not only indirectly through the interpretation of the players. This direct impact would destroy the face value of the information. If the financial networks are the global brain, or parts of it, then the clearinghouse is the helmet that prevents the direct, not translated impact of the hammer of bankruptcy from crushing the skull. Without this helmet the speed in which the information would be allowed to flow would be much slower. In the network environment, then, the condition of staying a member of the network is to provide information that can be taken at face value. The position of a player is determined by the information he, she, or it delivers to the other players, the faster and the more accurate it is, the more relevant the source becomes. Since everyone is connected with everyone reliable information gets delivered to the environment as such. The connectiveness forces even in the most competitive environments a certain form of collaboration. What seems paradoxical is the nature of the network, it needs collaboration to stabilize itself, building the stage for competition at the same time. 4.3. Convergence This connectiveness converges not only cooperation and competition, but also the discreteness of action and reaction, event and news into the continuity of a flow. The dealers see instantly what others do, which builds the basis of their actions which is fed back to the other dealers who base their decisions upon that. This constant feedback eliminates the separation of events (before) and news (after) emerging into a constant presence. In a constant presence predicting the future is the most important task. Self-learning systems that can feed upon themselves, learning through feedback become the adequate models to interpret the patterns of that presence and its inherent future. It is only logic that such a convergence is also expressed organizationaly. Reuters does not only provide the news and information about the financial markets to the markets but it also provides the tools for the markets to make the information. Consumer of news and producer of news converge and the network displays instantly to everyone what everyone else does. Or, in other words, its only content are the users. 4.4. The paradox of control A networkâs connectiveness is not only defined by its ability to connected people over time and space barriers, its second characteristic is its tendency to integrate formerly independent elements on a higher level of abstraction. Abstraction allows the construction of larger areas of control, in the financial markets through instruments such as derivatives, but these instruments become at the same time less stable and the environment less predictable. There are simply to many factors to really exercise control. Increased abstraction and the possibilities to influence ever greater area create a paradox of control. ãThe paradox of scale and control is most visible in the financial sector where heavy investment in technologies designed to enhance the predictability and responsiveness has been blamed for exacerbating instability: when a multitude of different and competing actors seek to improve their control capacities, the result at the level of the system is a breakdown of control. What is rational at the micro level becomes highly irrational at the macro level.ä With the number of connections and the speed of communication rising the predictability and controllability of the system as such is decreasing. 5. Outlook: development without control? The interconnected environment is driven by an internal logic that is not reducible to the planning of the small number of centers. Even though there are clearly visible major nodes within the network they are not in a central command position. The are in the same way interconnected to the network at large as any smaller node. On the other hand, development is not random. It is the result of great number of planned efforts to survive in that environment. Each environment rewards its members if they use specific strategy to seek that survival, these strategies, or rules of conduct, evolve over the time out of interaction of the members who constantly feed back the success of their actions regarding the reaction of the other members of the network to readjust their own strategy. The two paradoxes of networks, control/chaos and cooperation/competition, produce two completely equally adequate ways to describe them. Form the inside, on the level of the usage they are complex and unpredictable, chaos and competition are dominating the picture. From the outside, on the level of effects, they are very predictable and unimodal, cooperation and control seem to be their prime features. -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: majordomo@is.in-berlin.de and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de