Machines rise and prosper through market turmoil

Computer-driven strategies have outperformed after floundering in 2007

Last October, Jaffray Woodriff, founder, chief executive and portfolio manager of Quantitative Investment Management, a $3.2bn (€2.4bn) hedge fund, was on the verge of interrupting his computer-generated models and pulling out of his positions.

Woodriff's models and analysis, which are automated, were all saying the same thing: that the correlations in financial markets could not last forever and that trading opportunities - which the computer had studied, compared, back-tested, stress-tested and simulated every which way - would turn around. "I was very scared in October about the global economy, but I knew I wasn't really going to intervene with our systems," he said.

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Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With TrumpExternal link

Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With Trump