The City awoke to a peculiar silence this morning. Not the silence of a bank holiday or a snow day, but the eerie quiet of a market that had simply stopped working. At 10:47 AM, a swarm of algorithmic trading systems, controlled by forces we do not fully understand and certainly do not trust, triggered a cascade of sell orders that overwhelmed the London Stock Exchange's capacity to process trades. The result: a five-minute halt that felt like an eternity to anyone with skin in the game.
Let us be clear about what happened. This was not a flash crash of the 2010 variety, where prices plummeted before recovering. This was a shutdown. A digital blockade. The kind of event that makes one wonder whether the machine we have built to allocate capital efficiently has instead become a weapon of mass disruption.
The culprit, as always, is high-frequency trading. These algorithms, designed to exploit microscopic price discrepancies, operate in a world where microseconds matter. When they sense volatility, they do not think; they react. And when they all react in the same direction, the market becomes a stampede. The LSE's circuit breakers kicked in, but not before wiping out £2.3 billion in notional value. That number may sound abstract, but it represents real pension savings, real hedging costs, and real damage to investor confidence.
Now, the usual apologists will tell us that this is a necessary evil. That HFT provides liquidity. That markets are more efficient today than they were when men in braces shouted at each other on the floor. To which I say: nonsense. Liquidity that vanishes at the first sign of stress is not liquidity; it is an illusion. And efficiency that comes at the cost of systemic fragility is no efficiency at all.
The Bank of England is, of course, reviewing the situation. Governor Bailey will likely call for 'enhanced resilience' and 'improved coordination' between exchanges. But we have heard that before. After the 2015 flash crash, after the 2020 COVID circuit-breaker chaos, we heard the same promises. And yet here we are again, staring at a blank screen wondering if our financial system has grown too clever by half.
The real problem is not the code. It is the lack of fiscal discipline that created this environment. Low interest rates for a decade forced yield-hungry investors into riskier assets. Central bank bond-buying distorted price signals. And now, as inflation stubbornly refuses to return to target, we are left with a market that is addicted to cheap money and terrified of withdrawal. The algorithms are merely the symptom of a deeper malaise: a market that no longer knows how to price risk because it has not been allowed to feel it.
What is to be done? First, we must accept that HFT provides no social value. It is a tax on long-term investors, a distraction from genuine capital allocation. A small transaction tax on high-turnover strategies would discourage the arms race without harming genuine market makers. Second, we need circuit breakers that last longer than a coffee break. Fifteen minutes, perhaps, to let human beings assess the situation rather than relying on machines programmed by mathematicians who have never read a balance sheet.
But the broader lesson is harder to swallow. We have built a financial system that prioritises speed over substance. We have rewarded traders who can react in milliseconds over investors who can analyse a company's fundamentals. Until we reverse that priority, we will continue to see these episodes. And each one will erode the trust that underpins every transaction.
So, as the markets reopen and the bots resume their chatter, ask yourself: is this really the best way to finance our future? Because if the answer is yes, then we have already lost more than we can afford.







