
Flash Boys
by Michael Lewis
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The summary
Michael Lewis reconstructs how a group of traders discovered the stock market was being rigged millisecond by millisecond. Behind it were high-frequency algorithms trading ahead of other investors' orders. Published in 2014, the book hit No. 1 on the New York Times bestseller list and put high-frequency trading (HFT) in the mouths of people who had never heard of dark pools or front-running.
Lewis isn't a trader or a financial analyst, he's a journalist, and that shows in how he turns a technically dense subject — market microstructure, millisecond latency, exchange fragmentation — into a story that reads like a thriller. The protagonist, Brad Katsuyama, discovers almost by accident why his orders were filling worse than expected, and pulls the thread until he understands the whole mechanism.
The book documents specific practices: how certain high-frequency operators detected a large order before it completed and traded ahead of it, and how so-called dark pools hid much of the market's real activity from ordinary investors. It isn't a generic attack on HFT, but a detailed account of specific mechanisms, with names and dates.
It isn't a trading book in the sense that it won't teach you how to trade, but it changes how you understand what happens between sending an order and its execution. For a futures trader, where regulated markets offer a transparency others don't, it's a read that adds context about the real playing field rather than applicable technique. It fits well as background reading, not as the first book on the list.
About the author
Michael Lewis
American journalist and writer specializing in finance; author of bestsellers such as Flash Boys, The Big Short and Moneyball.
What You'll Learn
- How high-frequency trading actually works
- What dark pools are and why they hide market activity
- The mechanics of millisecond front-running
- Why market microstructure matters even when you can't see it
- That regulated futures markets offer more transparency
Recommended For
- Traders curious about the real structure of the market
- Anyone who wants to understand HFT without excessive jargon
- Readers looking for a well-told story, not a manual
- Futures traders wanting context on other markets
- Not a first trading read, but a solid complement to one
Details
- Published
- 2014
- Pages
- 298
- Publisher
- Deusto
- ISBN
- 9788423418800




