Finance Professor Calls CFTC Allegations That Nav Sarao Caused Flash Crash "Outrageous"

Steven Lofchie Commentary by Steven Lofchie

In a Streetwise Professor blog post titled, "A Matter of Magnitudes: Making Matterhorn Out of a Molehill," University of Houston finance professor Craig Pirrong discussed the CFTC civil complaint in the Nav Sarao case, along with the affidavit by Cal-Berkeley's Terrence Hendershott.

According to Dr. Pirrong, instead of supporting the CFTC's claims that Sarao's actions had a large impact on contributing to the Flash Crash, Hendershott's report "undermines" the CFTC's claims. Rather, Hendershott's two analyses estimate small price impacts from Sarao's activity that are minuscule compared to the price effects that the CFTC asserts. Dr. Pirrong goes on to say that he is "deeply disturbed" by the complaint's and Hendershott's "sample days" concept which Dr. Pirrong likened to "cherry picking."

Furthermore, Dr. Pirrong pointed out that the DOJ, the CFTC, and Hendershott all state that Sarao turned the layering algorithm on and off, which caused prices to "rebound by approximately the same amount as turning it on caused prices to fall." Dr. Pirrong argued that this is "directly contrary" to the consistent insinuation that Sarao was driving down prices. Instead, Dr. Pirrong reasoned that Sarao caused price "oscillations." Additionally, Dr. Pirrong asserted that the CFTC complaint lacks "actual evidence" in the section labeled "Example of the Layering Algorithm Causing an Artificial Price" that contains no analysis of market price.

Dr. Pirrong contended that if the CFTC tries to prove that Sarao caused or even contributed to the recent "Flash Crash," "it will face huge obstacles." He explained that there were many actors in the markets on the day of the Flash Crash. Attributing the huge change in the system to the behavior of any one individual is "metaphysically impossible to prove" he stated. Dr. Pirrong acknowledged that Navinder Sarao's conduct was "dodgy" and noted there is "a colorable case" that he did engage in illegal spoofing and layering, but concluded that the CFTC's assertion as to the alleged impact of his conduct and the legal consequences that could arise from his prosecution are "outrageous."

Commentary

Based on the material presented to date, it seems unlikely that the CFTC will be able to demonstrate any link, let alone causation, between Nav Sarao's trading (even if illegal) and the Flash Crash. At best, the CFTC's assertions seem an argument of the "butterfly effect"; that Mr. Sarao's flapped his wings (or flipped his orders) causing ripples leading to a flood of ensuing events. In some philosophical sense, it may be true that every event in the world contributes to every other, but it is not readily demonstrable in any meaningful way. If Mr. Sarao's trading in one instance "contributed" to the Flash Crash, his trading in another 100,000 instances prevented some other Flash Crash. How could one possibly know?
 
The CFTC's assertions in this case are troubling because they diminish confidence in the intellectual authority of the government to investigate the reasons why things go wrong. No one doubts the existence of a particular mishap (whether it is in the 2008 market crash or the Flash Crash). But one can very much doubt whether the causes that the government points to are in fact the real causes. And if the causes are misidentified, then inevitably the correctives will be wrong, perhaps causing further damaging going forward.
 
The extravagance of the CFTC's assertions are troubling for Mr. Sarao, of course, in that they diminish his right to obtain a fair hearing as to the actual crimes with which he is charged by scapegoating him as the perpetrator of the collapse of the entire market.

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