A computer-driven sale worth $US4.1 billion ($4.24 billion) by a single trader helped trigger the May flash crash, which sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping nearly 1000 points in less than a half-hour and set off liquidity crises that ricocheted between US futures and stock markets.
A report issued on Friday by the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission determined the plunge was caused when the trading firm executed a computerised selling program in an already stressed market.
The report did not identify the trader by name, but internal documents obtained from futures exchange operator CME Group identified that trader as money manager Waddell & Reed Financial.
The long-awaited report focused on the relationship between two hugely popular securities - E-Mini Standard & Poor's 500 futures and S&P 500 "SPDR" exchange-traded funds - and detailed how high-frequency algorithmic trading can sap liquidity and rock the marketplace.
"The interaction between automated execution programs and algorithmic trading strategies can quickly erode liquidity and result in disorderly markets," the report said.
The "flash crash" sent the Dow Jones Andustrial Average plunging within minutes, exposing flaws in the electronic marketplace dominated by high-speed trading.
The report lays the foundation for a commission to recommend new rules to avoid a repeat. At least one lawmaker threatened congressional action if regulators did not address the disparity in the markets.
Trading was turbulent that afternoon because of concerns over the European debt crisis. Against that backdrop, a "large fundamental trader" initiated a sell program to sell 75,000 E-Mini contracts as a hedge to an existing equity position, according to the 104-page report.
Citing documents from CME Group, Reuters reported on May 14 that Waddell sold a large order of E-Minis during the market plunge, identifying the firm to which the chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Gary Gensler, had alluded in congressional testimony.
The CFTC had resisted naming Waddell in Friday's report because of laws that allow it to withhold such information from the public, sources have said.
Waddell's selling algorithm had "no regard to price or time," the report said. That, coupled with the "aggressive" reaction by high-frequency traders hedging their positions, led to two separate "liquidity crises" -- one in the E-minis, the other among individual stocks.
Waddell's algo "responded to the increased volume by increasing the rate at which it was feeding the orders into the market, even though orders that it already had sent to the market were arguably not yet fully absorbed by fundamental buyers or cross-market arbitrageurs," the report said.
These arbitrageurs transferred the selling pressure to the stock market, sparking a "hot-potato" effect among high-frequency traders that rapidly passed the same positions back and forth.
Meanwhile, the report continued, the stock market began plunging as trading pauses kicked in at individual firms, as high-frequency traders became net sellers, and as market makers began routing "most, if not all," retail orders to the public markets -- a flood of unusual selling pressure that sucked up more dwindling liquidity.
Shares of Waddell edged higher on Friday. They fell sharply on the day of the initial Reuters report.
The unprecedented flash crash called into question many of the regulatory and technological changes over the last decade, which ushered in an era of lightning-quick trading on dozens of mostly electronic exchanges and alternative venues.
Data to the beginning of this month show that funds have exited mutual funds in every week since early May. Meanwhile, the 20-day moving average of the S&P 500's daily volume shows a slow decline since late May, according to Reuters data.
"I do not expect today's report to restore the confidence that was lost as a result of the flash crash," said David Joy, Minneapolis-based chief market strategist at Columbia Management, a large money manager.
"Most individual investors do not fully understand how high-frequency trading works, only that it can create volatility and seems to put them at a disadvantage. Only time, and higher stock prices, will restore that lost confidence."
The SEC, under enormous political and public pressure to act, in the last few months adopted new trading curbs known as circuit breakers and proposed establishing a consolidated audit trail of all stock trading.
Lawmakers seized on the latest report as a reason for the SEC to do more to fix the fragmented markets.
"The SEC should seriously consider ways to slow things down when markets get volatile," said Democratic Senator Charles Schumer.
Democratic Representative Paul Kanjorski said regulators must act quickly to revise market rules.
If necessary, Congress must "put in place new rules of the road to ensure the fair, orderly and efficient functioning of the US capital markets," Kanjorski said.
The flash crash report comes just as the SEC and the CFTC have begun drafting nearly 200 rules required by the landmark Wall Street reform legislation, which includes a revamp of the opaque over-the-counter derivatives market.
Reuters
http://www.smh.com.au/business/markets/single-trader-sparked-wall-streets-flash-crash-20101002-161fr.html