Trading algorithms and computer-driven systematic trading have continued to be the scapegoat for many along Wall Street, both in the face of the coronavirus and otherwise. These fancy new forms of technology are earmarked as the biggest risk to the market at large, with Michael Lewis citing high-frequency trading as the “rigging” of the stock market, and figures as prominent as Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin believing that they have a negative impact on market turmoil (Cox, 2018). However, is this caricature accurate? While even those that program trading algorithms themselves recognize the potential downsides of implementing this technology, the broad use of computers as the only scapegoat is misguided and deceiving (Wigglesworth, 9 Jan 2019).