Monday, July 2, 2012

RPT-NYSE catch saves broker from disastrous blunder

* Erroneous order for 17 mln Monster Worldwide shares caught

* Stock halted to avoid egregious closing price

* Broker meant to place Monster Beverage order

NEW YORK, July 2 (Reuters) - They might be tooting their own

horn, but the New York Stock Exchange may have a point.

A programming error on a massive trade by a broker-dealer on

Friday nearly caused a "disastrous" set of events at market

close that could have cost millions, but was caught by a person

overseeing end of day trading, the exchange, owned by NYSE

Euronext, said.

The event illustrates the difference in market structure

between a fully electronic exchange and the Big Board, which has

a hybrid system where the open and close are monitored by flesh

and blood "Designated Market Makers" (DMMs), said Lou Pastina,

executive vice president of operations at NYSE.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has been taking

a deep look into market structure issues ever since the May 6,

2010 flash crash. Its sanctioned electronic exchange Direct Edge

Holdings LLC in October, saying weak internal controls led to

millions of dollars in trading losses and a systems outage.

The SEC is now considering forcing Nasdaq OMX Group

to upgrade its trading systems following Facebook's May

18 market debut, which was marred by technical glitches that led

to losses estimated in the hundreds of millions, according to a

Wall Street Journal report.

WRONG MONSTER

At 3:59:59 p.m. Eastern time on Friday, a broker-dealer

placed an order for 17 million shares of Monster Worldwide

, which was trading at $8.50 a share, with no offers in

site.

Typically, when an order comes in at the close, NYSE has a

procedure to go out and solicit contra-side interests to fill

the order, but given the thin book for Monster Worldwide,

something smelled off this time, said Pastina.

The DMM saw it, alerted the operations staff, the stock was

halted, and the broker-dealer was contacted. It turned out the

broker-dealer did not want to buy Monster Worldwide. Rather, it

was looking to buy an unspecified amount of Monster Beverage

Corp, the Sara Lee coffee and tea spinoff that was a

new entrant to the S&P 500.

"They had a programming error, so we were able to prevent a

disastrous situation," said Pastina.

Total trading volume on Friday in online job firm Monster

Worldwide did not even hit 1 million shares.

Had the 17 million share order gone through, the stock,

which had a share buy imbalance of 17,000, would have soared as

the buy orders - there were about 60 of them - would have

continued to automatically execute until there were no more

offers.

It would have clearly been an erroneous execution.

"Anybody who would have sold that stock would have thought,

'hey, this is terrific,' but it would have been subject to a

clearly erroneous trade," said Pastina.

"That may have come later and they may have sold that stock

and turned around and used that money to buy something else, and

it would have been a compound error for the sellers."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rpt-nyse-catch-saves-broker-disastrous-blunder-105957815--sector.html

beverly hills hotel beverly hills hotel whitney houston national anthem dolly parton i will always love you beverly hilton hotel whitney houston found dead i will always love you whitney houston

No comments:

Post a Comment