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Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt Paperback – March 23, 2015
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#1 New York Times Bestseller ― With a new Afterword
"Guaranteed to make blood boil." ―Janet Maslin, New York Times
In Michael Lewis's game-changing bestseller, a small group of Wall Street iconoclasts realize that the U.S. stock market has been rigged for the benefit of insiders. They band together―some of them walking away from seven-figure salaries―to investigate, expose, and reform the insidious new ways that Wall Street generates profits. If you have any contact with the market, even a retirement account, this story is happening to you.
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
- Publication dateMarch 23, 2015
- Dimensions5.5 x 1 x 8.3 inches
- ISBN-100393351599
- ISBN-13978-0393351590
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Editorial Reviews
Review
― Hector Tobar, Los Angeles Times
"Important to public debate about Wall Street… in exposing what one of his central characters calls the ‘Pandora’s box of ridiculousness’ that financial exchanges have become."
― Philip Delves Broughton, Wall Street Journal
"Reads like a thriller . . . Lewis is the kind of writer who creates his own weather system."
― John Lanchester, London Review of Books
"Remarkable… Michael Lewis has a spellbinding talent for finding emotional dramas in complex, highly technical subjects."
― Financial Times
"Michael Lewis does it again . . . fascinating."
― Steven Pearlstein, Washington Post
"A beautiful narrative, so well-written. You’ve got to get this."
― Jon Stewart, The Daily Show
"If you read one business book this year, make it Flash Boys."
― David Sirota, Salon
"Michael Lewis is a genius, and his book will give high-frequency trading a much-needed turn under the microscope."
― Kevin Roose, New York Magazine
"Michael Lewis knows how to tell a story."
― Vanity Fair
"A fast-paced tale backed by gutsy reporting."
― Tina Jordan, Entertainment Weekly
"Who knew high-frequency trading was such a sexy subject?"
― Bloomberg Business Week
"Score one for the humans! Critics of high speed, computer-driven trading have a new champion."
― CNN Money
"Flash Boys richly deserves to be the first chapter in a new discussion of market rules and abuses… Lewis raises troubling and necessary questions."
― The American Conservative
"Michael Lewis is one of the premier chroniclers of our age."
― Huffington Post
"When it comes to narrative skill, a reporter’s curiosity and an uncanny instinct for the pulse of the zeitgeist, Lewis is a triple threat."
― James B. Stewart, New York Times
"[Lewis] is a top-flight storyteller."
― Lev Grossman, Time
"A tour de force that will grab and hold your attention like the best of thrillers."
― Jon Talton, Seattle Times
"Lewis writes about the resilience of underdogs, even in the face of seemingly overwhelming odds. He’s doing essential work, and anything that embarrasses fat cats and encourages reform is a flash in the right direction."
― Julie Hinds, Detroit Free Press
"Lewis simply tells the truth."
― Will Deener, Dallas News
"Michael Lewis has another hit on his hands."
― Zachary Warmbrodt and Dave Clarke, Politico
"[Lewis’s] ability to find compelling characters and tell a great story through their eyes is unparalleled. He can untangle complex subjects like few others. His prose sparkles."
― Joe Nocera, New York Times
"As always, Lewis simplifies the complex―and makes it fascinating."
― People
"Recommended… Entertaining."
― San Francisco Chronicle
"Entirely engaging… Illuminates a part of Wall Street that has generally done business in the shadows."
― New York Review of Books
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company; Reprint edition (March 23, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0393351599
- ISBN-13 : 978-0393351590
- Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1 x 8.3 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #16,424 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #23 in Economic Conditions (Books)
- #29 in Company Business Profiles (Books)
- #38 in Investment Analysis & Strategy
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Michael Lewis, the best-selling author of The Undoing Project, Liar's Poker, Flash Boys, Moneyball, The Blind Side, Home Game and The Big Short, among other works, lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, Tabitha Soren, and their three children.
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Customers find the book fascinating and enjoyable to read. They find the content insightful and educational, explaining a complex world clearly. The writing quality is praised as great and easy to understand. Readers appreciate the fast-paced narrative and well-developed characters.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book fascinating and engaging. They describe it as a good story told around a truthful kernel. The book is described as sensational, entertaining, and worth reading.
"...And like a great detective story, it is eminently readable because at its heart is a kind of hero: Brad Katsuyama...." Read more
"...So, as a fellow author, I found the book fascinating...." Read more
"This is a classic Michael Lewis book. It reads quickly. The topic is fascinating...." Read more
"...His story is truly extraordinary and one that I think has the power to move and inspire all of us on, in and beyond Wall Street to transform and..." Read more
Customers find the book informative and educational. They say it explains the complex world better than others, providing many details on an important issue in the economy. The book also provides basic physics information that helps understand the transmission of information.
"...They exist to make it easier for institutional investors (like the folks to whom you entrust your pension and mortgage, for example) to trade in..." Read more
"...speed of electrons via fiber and microwave, the mining of competitive intelligence via LinkedIn, the mindset of Russian coders and the gritty..." Read more
"...It reads quickly. The topic is fascinating. The content is extremely insightful as the true technicalities of High Frequency Trading are either..." Read more
"...we know that Lewis is an excellent writer and has the gift of simplifying a complex story, but what made this book so inspiring for me was the heart..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book. They find it well-written, with great prose and explanations. The concept is understandable and resonates widely with readers.
"...And like a great detective story, it is eminently readable because at its heart is a kind of hero: Brad Katsuyama...." Read more
"...Of course we know that Lewis is an excellent writer and has the gift of simplifying a complex story, but what made this book so inspiring for me was..." Read more
"...In a way, he is one of the best nonfiction writers in English working today. I'd put him up there with Bill Bryson. But you know that already...." Read more
"...Obviously, it is well written and compelling...." Read more
Customers find the book a great introduction to high-frequency trading. They appreciate the explanation of flash trading, front-running, and how electronic trading improved the market. The book provides an easy-to-read perspective on automated trading and how some folks tried to beat the market.
"...exchange traded markets, e.g. futures and options, and these markets are more efficient, cheaper and more transparent than they have ever been...." Read more
"...think Lewis' writing style is perfect for the layman and the experienced trader alike...." Read more
"...Flash Boys continues that history with an easy reading perspective on High Frequency Trading...." Read more
"...book is well researched with facts, stats, personalities, players, markets, and all the insidious methods of high frequency trading splayed out in a..." Read more
Customers find the book's pace engaging. They appreciate the well-written and fast-paced description of high-speed trading. The book explains the topic efficiently and effectively, with details like fiber and microwave speeds.
"...Dark cables are cables that are optimized for speed of transaction...." Read more
"...As a technologist, I enjoyed all the details of speed of electrons via fiber and microwave, the mining of competitive intelligence via LinkedIn, the..." Read more
"...Its foundational one is an unfathomable stock trading speed measured in the 1/10000 of a second...." Read more
"...Another big problem is that this book focuses on the speed issue...." Read more
Customers find the book's characters interesting and engaging. They appreciate the author's ability to weave personalities into the narrative. The people in the book are real, with a quirky supporting cast. Readers also mention that the hero is a Canadian.
"...Moreover while several of the characters are engaging, this isn't -- like "Blind Side" -- so much a story about people as it is about..." Read more
"...Really, it's the characters. The people in this book are real...." Read more
"...It's an interesting cast of characters that come together to try and make things right in the market." Read more
"...Great characters introduced throughout the book, and patient and simplified explanation of the arcane details of how this swindle works make the..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it interesting and honest, providing a great window into the competitive nature of high-frequency trading. However, others feel the story is forced, rushed, and disconnected from the rest of the storyline. The book is considered controversial for its practices described.
"The book tells a good story and does so around a deep kernel of truth...." Read more
"...Christina testifies, the story line in “Flash Boys” is more fictional dramatization than fact...." Read more
"...And I can tell you that the casino poker analogy is perfect -- but not in the way Lewis thinks...." Read more
"...On (1), Michael Lewis does an ok job, although the story is forced. Some chapters have very little relation to each other...." Read more
Customers find the book repetitive, boring, and lacking in flair. They mention it's too long, lacks the same flair as other works, and feels less complete than others. The subject matter is not as interesting as others' books.
"...Not because "long" is intrinsically better, but because it feels rushed in a sloppy way...." Read more
"...Also, the book's entertainment value is much lower than some of Michael Lewis' other books, in particular Liar's Poker, Moneyball and The Big Short...." Read more
"...Chicago and NJ and HFT/speed arbitrage/dark pools - the rest of the book struggles...." Read more
"I found Flash Boys to be riveting. I read it in two sittings in two days...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2016If you have been watching economic news this week, you will have heard that the British pound collapsed in a “flash crash.” Most news stories leave it at that. (I suspect that’s because they don’t know what a flash crash really is.) Put simply (and in Flash Boys Michael Lewis explains this recurring phenomenon quite simply) a flash crash is how high frequency traders use computers, multiple exchanges and time to abuse the rules. Now that I’ve summarized that, let me back up a second and deconstruct the sentence. First, what are the rules? In 2007, after brokers were found to have been abusing customers’ trust once too often, the government came out with what’s called Reg NMS. This regulation (and here I am just going to quote Michael Lewis directly because I don’t think I can say it any better than he did). Reg NMS mandated that brokers buy shares at the best price. “To define best price, Reg NMS relied on the concept of the National Best Bid and Offer. If an investor wished to buy 10,000 shares of Microsoft, and 100 shares were offered on the BATS exchange at $30 a share, while the full 10,000 listed on the other twelve exchanges were offered at $30.01, his broker was required to purchase the 100 shares at Bats before moving on to other exchanges.”
This meant that anyone with a computer can see where a purchase is going to be made and for how much. So if you have a faster connection (and several exchanges where you can sell a few shares of a stock, you can already see how you can make money.) Sure, you won’t make a lot of money from any one trade. Maybe less than half a cent here and half a cent there. But that adds up. I know this from first-hand experience. The other day at work, I was trying to calculate what would the cost be of a service was excluded from a package of services. And my calculation kept being almost a billion off. I did it and re-did and re-did it every which way I could think of. I even pulled down my stats book to see if my math was off. Nothing. I got up and went for a cup of coffee just to take a break from this ridiculous problem and when I sat down again, I saw it. It was a rounding error. To be exact it was a rounding error in the one/thousandth decimal place. But I was dealing with billions of dollars and that rounding error made quite a difference. So yes, parts of pennies add up. But wait, there’s more.
The way the best price is computed is when an exchange computes all the bids and offers on a particular stock. This computation is done by a government computer and if you know one thing about government, you will know that it takes years to upgrade computers. That means that if you have your own, faster computer you can “front-run” the official best price and sell and buy 100s of shares at the “real” best price. Sure it will be a “rounding error” but as I said before, those rounding errors matter. So a rule that was intended to create equity and transparency in the market in fact institutionalized inequality between the traders who had access to the super-fast computers and those who did not. Only the former would make money from these rounding errors.
But wait, there is yet more. To make full use of Reg NMS you also need many different exchanges or dark pools and dark cables. And guess what, both exist. Dark cables are cables that are optimized for speed of transaction. Sure it’s a millisecond difference or even less but in that time you can get a lot of rounding errors. Dark pools are, in essence, proprietary exchanges. They exist to make it easier for institutional investors (like the folks to whom you entrust your pension and mortgage, for example) to trade in large blocks. So, for example if you have one million shares of Microsoft you want to sell (or buy) but don’t want your identity known, you would rather sell/buy those shares away from the glaring eye of the public transaction. Here’s the problem, if your are a high frequency trader, you (by definition) have a super-fast computer and access to dark cables. That means you can “ping” the many, many dark pools that have been set up. By some estimates, 40% of all trading is now done inside dark pools. And that in turn means you can know, well before the government-issued slow computers have finished calculating the best price what the real selling price is. That’s one heck of a rounding error in your pocket.
And finally, to make all this work, you need volatility. All volatility means is that the price of something moves up and down a lot. And obviously if it does that, there is a lot more room for a high-frequency trader to essentially insert him/herself in the middle of that trade. Basically here’s the way it works. You want to buy those 10,000 shares of Microsoft for $30. There’s a dark pool that will sell 100 of them to you for that price. I, as a high-frequency trader, ping that dark pool, know what the price you’re willing to buy for is and all the other prices out there and where you will buy from next. So I go and buy the next batch of Microsoft shares that are selling (as you will recall at $30.01). Now, your broker, by law, has to come and buy the shares from me. Except I sell the shares now at $30.1001. And right there, in less than the blink of an eye I have made almost $10. And that’s from a mere 9,900 shares—a small trade. So what high-frequency traders do in effect is charge a tax for trading. And that tax (like most taxes) makes economic activity, in this case people’s willingness to trade to decrease. It also means that flash crashes, caused when a front-running computer algorithm gets too clever by half, are inevitable.
In Flash Boys, Lewis explains all of this a little at a time. In some ways, the book reads like a great detective story. And like a great detective story, it is eminently readable because at its heart is a kind of hero: Brad Katsuyama. Brad sets out to hire a lot of computer programmers to beat the system. First he introduced Thor. This was a platform that enabled you to trade more slowly and then a brand new exchange called IEX (an exchange—and yes, it got the license to be an actual exchange) that did the same thing. The idea behind Thor and IEX seems counter-intuitive but in a high-frequency world it works. If you trade many thousands of shares per trade, then it makes sense that your order should arrive at all the exchanges/dark pools at the same time. That way no-one can ping/front-run you. You will not, in other words, be paying a tax on your trade. So to get the high-frequency traders out of the loop, you need to trade just slowly enough that your orders arrive at all exchanges at the same time.
This is the story of how Brad and the motley crew he gathered around him came up with that idea, the push-back they initially got from the industry and how they eventually sold the industry, including Goldman Sachs, on the concept. It is a story well worth reading. I highly recommend it.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2014I heard Billy Beane, GM of the Oakland As, describe in a humorous talk how the book Moneyball came to be. The author Michael Lewis initially told him he was working on an article for the New York Times. A few weeks later it had turned into a longer article for the NYT Magazine. A few months later, the conversations had become the basis for the best selling book.
I chuckled when I saw Lewis interview a panel of sports executives last year. I wondered if they were wondering where the conversation would show up in Lewis’s prolific writing. Certainly as I was reading Lewis’ new book Flash Boys I kept wondering how he got so many of the characters to talk so openly and in so much technical detail.
So, as a fellow author, I found the book fascinating.
As a technologist, I enjoyed all the details of speed of electrons via fiber and microwave, the mining of competitive intelligence via LinkedIn, the mindset of Russian coders and the gritty nuances of trading systems.
But, taking those two hats off, I found the book somewhat plodding. The blistering start turns out to be difficult to sustain. The main characters are not that interesting. Most of them are workaholics and not sure allowed Lewis too much insight into their personal lives. Lewis’ snark makes for lively reading, though. He describes an Irish character : “(had) the uneasy caution of a man who has survived one potato famine and is expecting another”
The book also does not have clear villains. The high frequency traders are mostly faceless (and he ends the book with a cryptic pointer to one of them). The Feds – the SEC and the FBI - come across as incompetent more than evil. Goldman Sachs comes off looking bad in several parts of the book, but gets more sympathetic treatment towards the end. If there is a clear “bad guy” it is Regulation NMS which while well intentioned has allowed speed to trump other goals trading systems should be focused on.
The gist of the book comes in this sentence “The entire history of Wall Street was the story of scandals ….linked together tail to trunk like circus elephants”. And in talking to folks in New York recently many have dismissed the book as Lewis’ morality play.
To me, the the scary takeaway is in our growing digital world the scandals are going to be ever more geeky with most regulators and common folk having even less of a chance of catching on for a long time.
Top reviews from other countries
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Kindleのお客様Reviewed in Mexico on March 30, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Excelente
Muy buen libro.
Rafael LoureiroReviewed in Brazil on April 1, 20215.0 out of 5 stars Amazing storytelling
Even for the ones who don’t know much about the stock market, the book is really easy to read, with a simple pick of words for everyone understand what’s going on. Really recommend if you like stock market stories and a good story at all
AkshimReviewed in India on March 27, 20215.0 out of 5 stars Hit the "buy now" button ASAP.
Such an incredible read it was. The gripping and enthralling story. And the biggest bow goes to the people who wanted transparency in the stock market orders as well as Michael Lewis - For literally just digging up the facts and the events as they happened in such an incredible manner. The research Michael has done for this book is simply breathtaking. This book is not just a casual read, it is a learning. I, personally, did not know anything about the HFTs (primarily because of the new regulations by the market regulators now-a-days) and the dark pools that the companies and the stock exchanges had/have created. Just a mind blowing book. The only tinie tiny minor downside is the penguin publications. The book quality and the page quality could've been better (if some other publishing house would've done it). But who cares because you literally have to think of some excuse to put this book down. Done with this, next two Michael Lewis targets - The big short and liar's poker. Reviews coming soon for them.
Conclusion - Well as "Inventors" of the IEX stock exchange would say : Pick up the f*****g book.
Yena ApithyReviewed in Japan on September 8, 20225.0 out of 5 stars You will not be disappointed
As Michael tells stories the way onlyhe does it, the narrative takes you from the backdoors of rooms full of servers managed by IT geeks to the trading floors of hedge funds and HFT managed by this new breed of traders, geeky, smart, playing with flash crashes and a lot of money.
Nice insights a lessons for life for wall Streeter and non wall Streeters alike. Enjoy.
It's always about the people and Michael knows how to bring each character at the forefront of the action and the STORY.
A. D. ThibeaultReviewed in Canada on April 7, 20145.0 out of 5 stars A Brief Summary and Review
The thrust: Over the past 20 years, and particularly in the past decade, the stock market has undergone some significant changes. The most visible change is that much of the action has now become computerized. For example, whereas stock markets used to consist of trading floors (pits), where floor traders swapped stocks back and forth, we now have computer servers where sellers and buyers are connected automatically. Now, on the one hand, this automation has led to some substantial efficiencies, as once necessary financial intermediaries have now largely become obsolete (this has led to savings not only because the old intermediaries earned an honest commission for their dealings, but because their privileged position sometimes led to corruption).
It is not that the new stock market has done away with intermediaries entirely. Take brokers, for example. Brokers are still used by large investors to help them move large chunks of stock where the market may not be able to fill the order immediately. The brokers take some risk in this action, and provide liquidity in doing so, since they help move capital to its most useful location, and thus brokers still provide a very useful service.
While brokers have always existed, the new stock market has also added a new breed of intermediary. This new breed of intermediary is known as the high frequency trader (HFT). The high frequency trader operates on speed, relying on location and advanced communications technology to learn about the movement of the market before others, and uses this knowledge to make winning trades.
To give you an indication of how important high frequency trading has become, consider that at least half of the trades now being made in the United States are coming from high frequency traders.
Those who defend high frequency trading argue that these quick trades actually help move money through the stock market, and thus add liquidity to the system (the way brokers do); and that, therefore, high frequency traders provide a valuable service.
However, just how high frequency trading works has largely remained a mystery to anyone outside of the industry itself; and many have become concerned that high frequency trading is not so much a liquidity-contributor as a way of scalping money off of trades that would have happened anyway.
In 'Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt', Michael Lewis follows one man who made it his mission to find out what was going on at the heart of HFT. That man is one Brad Katsuyama, a broker from the sleepy Canadian bank RBC.
Katsuyama’s interest in the mystery began back in 2007, when he found that the trades he was trying to make from his desk at RBC were not being executed in the way they once had. In short, Katsuyama was being ripped off. And that’s not all. Katsuyama soon found that other brokers were also being ripped off—and even the investment firms were being ripped off. And since the investment firms manage your money and mine, we were being ripped off too!! This was big.
Katsuyama’s dogged persistence eventually led him (and a growing band of fellow mystery-solvers) to find that it was indeed the high frequency traders who were ripping him (and everyone else) off (though the HFTs were not the only culprits involved). What’s more, Katsuyama’s team also discovered just how the HFTs were doing it. The long and the short of it is that the HFTs are just gaming the technology. And in a way that is not only ripping others off, but making the system more volatile, and prone to errors and disasters as well (witness the flash crash of May 6, 2010).
Rather than deciding to join the HFTs at the trough (which would have been easy enough to do), Katsuyama and his team decided to fix things. Specifically, the team decided to start their own stock exchange: a stock exchange (called the IEX) that was designed to be immune to advantages in technology, and hence fundamentally fair to all (it was either that or wait around for the SEC to do something—which may take forever).
Now, you would think that a stock exchange that is fundamentally fair to all would be a big hit. But then again, a whole heck of a lot of people have no interest in making things fair to all. Which side will win? The fate of the IEX (which opened in October of 2013) has yet to be determined...
This book is fantastic. The story will confirm your suspicious that truth is stranger than fiction. Lewis writes beautifully, unpretentiously, and makes the characters jump right off the page (that wouldn’t have been that difficult here—these are some brilliant characters). My only objection is that Lewis’ explanations of the technical side of things, while very good, could have occasionally been slightly more clear. Still, an enlightening and wonderful read.







