In Trading at the Speed of Light, Donald MacKenzie provides a fascinating sociological autopsy of high-frequency trading (HFT), moving beyond the usual "flash crash" headlines to explore the physical and social structures of modern finance. As a professor of sociology, MacKenzie approaches the world of ultrafast algorithms not just through code, but through what he calls "material political economy." He argues that as trading time shrinks toward the "Einsteinian limit"—where even the speed of light becomes a bottleneck—the importance of physical space and geography paradoxically intensifies.
The book chronicles the transition from the boisterous, human-centric trading pits of the 20th century to the silent, climate-controlled server rooms of today. MacKenzie reveals how this shift wasn't just a natural technological progression but a series of hard-fought political and regulatory battles. He details the extraordinary lengths to which firms go to shave nanoseconds off their execution times, including the construction of ultra-direct fiber-optic cables through mountains and the deployment of microwave towers to transmit data faster than glass.
One of the book’s most compelling insights is the "tyranny of location." In the HFT world, being just a few meters closer to an exchange’s matching engine can be the difference between a multi-million dollar profit and a total loss. This has created a "subterranean battle" among algorithms that many market participants never see. MacKenzie also distinguishes between "making" and "taking" strategies, showing how different markets—from equities and futures to foreign exchange—have evolved unique cultures and power dynamics between incumbent banks and the new HFT "carnivores."
For me, as a trader in a commodity production company, based in Jakarta, who is located far away from the exchange server, to try this kind of trading style seems a little bit far. We rely more on trend analysis by looking at fundamentals.
Unlike many financial texts that rely solely on quantitative data, MacKenzie’s work is grounded in over 300 interviews conducted over a decade. This ethnographic approach allows him to capture the "mundane political economy"—the everyday ways that technology, law, and human interaction coalesce to create market liquidity. The result is a sober, deeply researched account that demystifies the black box of algorithmic trading and highlights how the physical world still governs the digital one, yet still has some barrier for entry for most ordinary institution or personal trader.