Nasdaq halt steps up pressure over electronic trading - Action News
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Nasdaq halt steps up pressure over electronic trading

The latest high-tech disruption in the financial markets increases the pressure on Nasdaq and other electronic exchanges to take steps to avoid future breakdowns and manage them better if they do occur.
A television displays news about the Nasdaq on in New York on Thursday after it halted trading because of a technical problem. (Seth Wenig/Associated Press)

The latest high-tech disruption in the financial markets increases the pressure on Nasdaq and other electronic exchanges to take steps to avoid future breakdowns and manage them better if they do occur.

The three-hour trading outage on the Nasdaq stock exchange Thursday also can be expected to trigger new rounds of regulatory scrutiny on computer-driven trading. Investors' shaky confidence in the markets also took another hit.

The exchange was set to open as normal Friday.

Questions about potential dangers of the super-fast electronic trading systems that now dominate the U.S. stock markets ripple again through Wall Street and Washington. Stock trading now relies heavily on computer systems that exploit split-penny price differences. Stocks can be traded in fractions of a second, often by automated programs. That makes the markets more vulnerable to technical failures.

New oversight likely on electronic trading

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission expects to put forward next week a plan for new restrictions and oversight on high-speed trading, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said Friday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the CFTC commissioners haven't yet voted to open the proposed plan to public comment.

Computer trading has exploded over the past several years and now accounts for more than half of all stock- and futures-market trades. A glitch at a large financial institution can send waves of trades through the system in error.

The CFTC must decide how to control runaway trading algorithms that can wreak havoc in the market and whether high-frequency firms should register with the government or have their trading specially monitored.

The Nasdaq episode cracked the midday calm of a quiet summer trading day on Wall Street. Brokers and traders scrambled to figure out what went wrong.

It's happenedbefore

  • Aug. 1, 2012. Trading in 140 stocks on the New York Stock Exchange was thrown into chaos because of a software glitch at Knight Capital, causing sudden price swings.
  • May 18, 2012. The highly anticipated initial public offering of Facebook was marred by a series of technical problems on the Nasdaq. The start of trading was delayed and many traders didn't know if their orders went through.
  • March 23, 2012. BATS Global Markets, a Kansas-based company that competes with Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange in offering stock trading services, canceled its own IPO after a series of technical snafus.
  • May 6, 2010. The Dow Jones industrial average plunged hundreds of points in mere minutes. A months-long investigation by regulators concluded that the sudden drop occurred when a trading firm executed a computerized selling program in an already stressed market.
  • Dec. 10, 1987, Aug. 1 1994. Trading was delayed twice on the Nasdaq, seven years apart, because of squirrels getting electrocuted on electrical equipment, leading to power outages.

Nasdaq-OMX CEO Robert Greifeld told CNBC on Friday that unspecified, external factors caused the glitch, and that the exchange followed all the proper procedures to correct the problem.

"We all have to be aware of the other person not acting always in the proper way, and you have to have your system be able to handle defensive driving," Greifeld said. "We're deeply disappointed with what happened yesterday. We aspire to perfection. We want to get to 100 percent up time."

The shutdown appeared to occur in an orderly fashion and didn't upset other parts of the stock market.

But it was a major embarrassment. While hardly as stunning as the "flash crash" that set off a steep and sudden stock-market plunge in May 2010, the Nasdaq disruption some are dubbing the "flash freeze" did stir memories of it.

No proper fix after 2010

After the 2010 market break, regulators "never really developed a fix for it, and these kinds of things are going to continue to happen," said Michael Greenberger, a law professor at the University of Maryland who was the top market oversight official at the CFTC in the late 1990s. High-speed trading commanded by mathematical formulas rather than people brings "the possibility of a calamity," Greenberger said.

Regulators need to slow down automated trading by requiring trades to be placed "with human input," he said.

On Thursday, only a few hours after trading ended for the day, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission said she will work to finalize SEC rules that would subject U.S. exchanges to tighter oversight of automated trading.

"Today's interruption in trading, while resolved before the end of the day, was nonetheless serious and should reinforce our collective commitment to addressing technological vulnerabilities of exchanges and other market participants," SEC Chairman Mary Jo White said.

SEC looking at Nasdaq systems

The SEC likely will scrutinize Nasdaq's systems and emergency procedures, and could order the exchange to upgrade them if it finds them lacking, said Phil Stern, a former SEC attorney now in private practice. In addition, Nasdaq could face significant financial penalties and other sanctions as a result of the breakdown, Stern suggested.

"The (SEC) is going to have to be satisfied one way or the other that the likelihood of this happening again is extraordinarily remote," he said. "They have to be sure that the Nasdaq has taken every step to avoid a recurrence of this event."

The actions Nasdaq takes, or should take, will be closely watched. Those range from improved testing and backup of its systems to ramping up its crisis management and communicating more clearly with the investing public.

The Nasdaq exchange was born of technology and is dominated by the biggest names in the field like Microsoft, Apple and Google. Thursday's breakdown followed a series of tech-rooted disasters involving various exchanges. They included Facebook's bungled public offering launch on Nasdaq in May 2012, one of the largest IPOs in history. The SEC later fined Nasdaq $10 million for that disruption the largest penalty it ever imposed on an exchange.

Griefeld's comments

In television interviews today Nasdaq CEO Robert Griefeld said it is too early to tell who is to blame for Thursday's problem.

He said the exchange is working on its "defensive driving" to make sure it can correct problems even when they occur outside Nasdaq's own trading systems.

"Its when the unforeseen happens, the system has to be resilient and robust enough to handle that," he said.

The exchange opted for caution in restarting trading he said. Nasdaq had solved the technical glitch in half an hour, but spent the next two and half hours trying to ensure trading would be "fair and orderly" when it resumed, he added. That process involved communicating with scores of frantic traders and investment firms.

Griefeldsaid that he couldn't commit to never having another trading halt.

"I can never commit to anybody that there will never be a problem. [What] we have to commit to is we're going to work as hard as we can to get to 100 percent, and to the extent we can't, we can't achieve perfection, and there's an issue, then we have the proper procedures in place to respond to it," Greifeld said.

With files from CBC News