- #1
SolidGold
- 8
- 0
Hello,
I read an article about a year or two ago and I cannot remember in what magazine I read it, so I was hoping to generate some leads by reaching out. I want to find it because my professor wants to see it as well.
The article was about a team or group of physicists, at a certain university, that tracked the entire U.S. stock market money flow as it exchanged hands. The article said that in the end, after it goes through all these other hands, eventually about 70 percent or 73 percent or more of the money eventually was distributed between about 120 bank accounts across the world. It may have been 175 bank accounts, or maybe less, I don't know the exact details but it was certainly less than 200 bank accounts.
It showed various pictures of a 3D model that looked like a network diagram, and it showed the direction of the money and how it eventually all converged to be distributed among these few. Has anyone else read this article? I tried searching discover magazine and scientific american and google, and I can't get the right keywords to find anything close.
The funny thing is, about a year ago I ran into the article on the internet by accident. Now I cannot find it.
I read an article about a year or two ago and I cannot remember in what magazine I read it, so I was hoping to generate some leads by reaching out. I want to find it because my professor wants to see it as well.
The article was about a team or group of physicists, at a certain university, that tracked the entire U.S. stock market money flow as it exchanged hands. The article said that in the end, after it goes through all these other hands, eventually about 70 percent or 73 percent or more of the money eventually was distributed between about 120 bank accounts across the world. It may have been 175 bank accounts, or maybe less, I don't know the exact details but it was certainly less than 200 bank accounts.
It showed various pictures of a 3D model that looked like a network diagram, and it showed the direction of the money and how it eventually all converged to be distributed among these few. Has anyone else read this article? I tried searching discover magazine and scientific american and google, and I can't get the right keywords to find anything close.
The funny thing is, about a year ago I ran into the article on the internet by accident. Now I cannot find it.