Algorithmic finance and the Anthropogenic environmental crisis in accelerando: Science of finance capital as catalyst of climate change

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

High-frequency trading in financial markets is increasingly discursively related to climate change and produces peculiar iterative patterns of accommodation and reinforcement of environmental externalities. Stock market trades have accelerated at a rate where shares change hands in microseconds. This increases the possibility of systemic crises in markets and the physical environment. The chapter examines how high-frequency trading both reconfigures the dynamics of finance and changes the global financial system in new spatio-temporal ways. Importantly, it produces political ecologies of engagement, divergence, and convergence between the financial and Earth Systems. It examines technological change and algorithmic strategies at stock exchanges as algorithmic financialization intersects the Anthropocene debates on sustainability and social equity. The analysis explains the nature of high-frequency trading strategies and market responses to natural disasters finding that algorithmic economies contribute to worsening environmental crises and, further, financial investment algorithms reflect on climate change to reinforce harmful economic practices instead of mitigating them.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationSpatial futures : Difference and the post-Anthropocene
EditorsLaToyta Eaves, Heidi Nast, Alex Papadopoulos
Number of pages24
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Publication date2024
Pages321-344
ISBN (Print)9789819997602
ISBN (Electronic)9789819997619
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • algorithmic economies
  • Anthropocene
  • Climate Change
  • Nature and Space
  • Economic Geography
  • Finance

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