After The Bell

  

It's a horse race from 9:30 to 4 every day in New York City. Only instead of horses running around a track, it's stocks and bonds and other securities.

Then a bell rings, and two things happen. A) a dog drools and B) stocks stop officially trading. It is in this next thirty to sixty minutes that many companies take the opportunity to announce their quarterly results, or special events like a merger, or a CEO being caught on video with their mistress.

The bell moniker is a relic of bygone times when, at the end of the day, an actual bell was rung. It was, for better or worse, replaced with electronic, synthesized noises replicating a bell in today's way-too-high-tech world.

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Finance a la shmoop what is the fast market rule? okay things get crazy here [Two guys riding a rollercoaster]

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whoa and every now and then there's a leap well blimey, that's how things work

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here on the London Stock Exchange.....

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the fast market rule accommodates the chaos by giving brokers and other market

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makers the freedom to trade outside the ranges published to the exchange why is

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this needed? well because we live in a world of robots and artificial

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intelligence and fat thumbs that hit the wrong keys and hackers from Russia China

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this phenomenon in its finest form well check out Jack Nicholson in the original [Man stood next to Jack Nicholson as Joker]

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rely on human beings when you know the congressman hits the fan then assume

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that a computer will be clever enough to figure out what's wrong quickly you know

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when the world is on a collision course with chaos all over the place fast [Meteor strikes Earth]

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market rule, humans over robots...

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