At 2:42 pm on May 6, 2010, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) suddenly plunged by about 1,000 points within about 20 minutes. It sliced $1 trillion in investor wealth. As a result, it became known as the "Flash Crash." While the cause is far from certain, it does look like there were some major trades that tripped-up algorithmic trading systems (these use sophisticated computers for high-frequency trading).
No doubt, the Flash Crash had a jarring impact on retail investors. Could the markets be trusted? Were they safe?
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On May 6, we saw the Dow plunge almost 1,000 points in a matter of minutes. To date, no one has pinpointed the cause of the crash.
With sophisticated high-frequency trading and quant funds, it seems that the proverbial Hal 9000 has taken over Wall Street. Of course, a stark example of this was in May 6, in which the market inexplicably lost $862 billion in market value within 20 minutes. It was the "Flash Crash."


