Before Everbright, there was Knight Capital: A Knightmare on Wall Street Book Review

Knightmare on Wall Street

Edgar Perez’s Knightmare on Wall Street

The $3.8 billion of erroneous purchase orders that flew into Chinese equity markets on August 16, 2013, and later trades to try to offset the error, led to Everbright Securities, the country’s seventh-largest brokerage by market value, being barred from most proprietary trading, lifetime professional bans for four senior managers and the resignation of the president. The China Securities Regulatory Commission also imposed $85 million in fines and confiscation of any illegal gains.

Strict enforcement should be the norm of the nation’s capital market and the penalties on Everbright have set the benchmark, China Securities Journal said in an editorial. Meanwhile, Knight Capital’s own $7 billion erroneous position accumulated in the first 28 minutes of trading of August 1, 2013, still goes unpunished by the SEC.

Referring to CEO Thomas Joyce, Edgar Perez writes in Knightmare on Wall Street: “He will be forever remembered by the trading error that his strategic timing and management style allowed to happen.”  A follow-up to The Speed Traders, in which Perez examined high-frequency trading and interviewed a handful of practitioners, Knightmare on Wall Street addresses the story of Knight Capital, the firm that lost $461 million and shook U.S. equity markets in the summer of 2012, about a year before Everbright’s trading error.

Perez’s chapters about the incident and the events in the days after are written as a chronological-cum-investigative-report, with Perez starting off on August 1 at 9:30AM, reviewing the dramatic efforts to save the firm and then finishing on August 6 when the firm announced the consortium that rescued it.

Having risen to prominence as a globetrotting proponent of the regulated deployment of technology in trading, Perez finds plenty of targets for Knightmare on Wall Street, his review of Knight’s history, starting with Joyce, who was absent the morning of the incident. “On July 31, 2013, one of many quiet summer days in Wall Street, Joyce underwent knee surgery; he was getting ready to spend the days after resting at home. What could go wrong with deploying a piece of software to participate in NYSE‘s RLP? An event like that was not even in his radar, as it was business as usual.” RLP was the Retail Liquidity Program started by the New York Stock Exchange.

His narrative is at times caustically outrageous. “Why Knight took 28 minutes to stop the order flow was not clear until much later. Knight could have shut down its market flow to the exchange entirely but that could have jeopardized other orders, opening Knight up to additional liability. Neither Sadoff nor Sohos wanted to take that responsibility.” Steven Sadoff and George Sohos were two of the top executives who struggled to respond to the emergency. Couldn’t have they just unplugged the systems?

Perez shows in Knightmare on Wall Street a talent for distilling multiple threads of events and stitching them together into a seemingly singular narrative. From the internal discussions on how to stop the bleeding to the chaos on the New York Stock Exchange’s trading floor to the on-air reactions of CNBC’s anchors, Perez presents the story from different angles and captures the reader’s attention despite using one or two financial terms hard to be immediately understood by the layperson.

In the final chapter of Knightmare on Wall Street, Perez reviews the immediate consequences of Knight’s acquisition by GETCO, a fierce competitor that participated in its rescue. There is no place for two CEOs, so Joyce leaves, not without pocketing a $7.5 million payout. How could he take that much money when his shareholders lost almost half a billion dollars? There must be something American regulators need to learn from China; drastic and expeditious action is one of them. It is a disturbing end to a thought-provoking and action-filled read.

Indonesia Stock Trading Delayed as Members Unable to Connect

Indonesia Stock Trading Delayed as Members Unable to ConnectThe Indonesian stock exchange delayed trading after almost a third of its members failed to connect to the bourse’s system. Trading resumed about 1:30 p.m. according to Samsul Hidayat, the bourse’s director of trading and membership.

Only 84 of 114 bourse members were able to connect this morning, Uriep Budhi Prasetyo, director of surveillance and compliance, said by phone today. Bourse members have a seat on the exchange and can trade directly. Hidayat said by phone that he was in a meeting with his team to review what happened. The benchmark Jakarta Composite Index (JCI) rose less than 0.1 percent to 4,147.33 as of 3:03 p.m. local time.

The exchange experienced an hour-long disruption in April 2009 when a cable used for sending transaction data malfunctioned after a buy order overran its capacity, the bourse said at the time. In October 2008, the bourse halted trading for three days following a 10 percent plunge in the key stock index.

“It creates a reputation problem,” Siswa Rizali, who helps manage about $367 million at PT Andalan Artha Advisindo Sekuritas, said by phone from Jakarta. “It happened before. The stock exchange has to convince people that they have the capability to provide smooth transactions.”

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High-Frequency Trading Expert to Bring Unique Speed Trading Workshop to Shanghai

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012, How High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FXThe Speed Traders unveiled dates today for Edgar Perez’s full-day seminars, The Speed Traders Workshop 2012: How Algorithmic and High Frequency Traders Leverage Profitable Strategies to Find Alpha in Equities, Options, Futures and FX in Shanghai, August 1st, presentations that will be followed by the rest of the world including dates in Southeast Asia, Latin America and North America.

The Speed Traders Workshop 2012 Hong Kong, Sao Paulo, Seoul, Kuala Lumpur, Warsaw, Kiev, Beijing and Shanghai put Perez, author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World (http://www.TheSpeedTraders.com), published by McGraw-Hill Inc. (2011) and currently being translated into Chinese and Portuguese, on the map as the preeminent global expert in algorithmic and high-frequency trading.

Perez is widely regarded as the preeminent speaker in the specialized area of high-frequency trading. He is author of The Speed Traders, An Insider’s Look at the New High-Frequency Trading Phenomenon That is Transforming the Investing World, published by McGraw-Hill Inc. (2011) and currently being translated into Chinese and Portuguese, and was Adjunct Professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, where he taught Algorithmic Trading and High-Frequency Finance.

Perez has been featured on CNBC Cash Flow (with Oriel Morrison), CNBC Squawk Box (with Geoff Cutmore), BNN Business Day (with Kim Parlee), TheStreet.com (with Gregg Greenberg), Channel NewsAsia Business Tonight and Cents & Sensibilities (with Lin Xue Ling), NHK World, iMoney Hong Kong, Hedge Fund Brief, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, Valor Econômico, The Korea Herald, FIXGlobal Trading, The Korea Times, TODAY Online, Oriental Daily News and Business Times.

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Hong Kong Developer Cartel Being Challenged: Barclays

Bloomberg News

The likes of Sino Land Co. Ltd., Henderson Land Development Co. Ltd. and Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd. could be seeing their elite status as property developers shaken up, according to Barclays.

The bank notes that there has been an uptick in deals in recent months by small and mid-cap property developers in Hong Kong, as well as increasing interest from mainland players, which it says is “unusual.”

Earlier this month, an entity backed by Chinese state-owned commodities trader Cofco Corp. bought a majority stake in Hong Kong Parkview Group Ltd. for HK$362 million. Hong Kong Parkview is the developer of high-end housing complex Parkview.

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Exclusive: Freight dispute risks delay in Iran oil to China – sources

China has turned to NITC for delivery of the 500,000 barrels per day of crude it buys from Iran as a result of European Union sanctions. The EU measures took effect on Sunday and prohibit European insurers, who dominate the maritime sector, from offering cover on Iran crude.

Iranian oil shipments have already tumbled 40 percent this year, according to the International Energy Agency, as the Islamic Republic’s top customers – China, India, Japanand South Korea – scale back or halt their purchases amid Western sanctions aimed at halting Tehran’s nuclear program.

Industry watchers say Europe’s marine insurance sanction is the most effective by Western nations against Iran’s oil trade.

The sanctions ban EU insurers from covering tankers carrying Iranian crude anywhere in the world. About 90 percent of the world’s tanker insurance is underwritten in the West.

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China’s Manufacturing Growth Weakens as New Orders Drop

qilai shen

Chinese manufacturing indexes slipped to seven-month lows as overseas orders dropped, and South Korea cut its estimate for exports this year, underscoring risks to Asian economies from Europe’s debt crisis.

A purchasing managers’ index for China fell to 48.2 in June from 48.4 in May, HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit said today. A similar measure released by the government yesterday also slid. South Korea yesterday lowered its export growth forecast to 3.5 percent from 6.7 percent.

China, the world’s biggest exporter, may need to add more stimulus to arrest an economic slowdown after the HSBC report showed the steepest decline in overseas orders since the global financial crisis. The nation’s weaker growth is rippling through Asia, with South Korea’s sales to China, its largest market, failing to increase in the first 20 days of June.

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Micron Agrees to Buy Elpida in $2.5 Billion Transaction

Micron Technology Inc. (MU) agreed to buy bankrupt Japanese chipmaker Elpida Memory Inc. in a transaction valued at 200 billion yen ($2.5 billion), gaining memory chip- making assets that may help it avert price swings that fueled four straight quarters of losses.

Micron will pay 60 billion yen in cash at the closing of the deal, while the remaining 140 billion yen in future annual installments through 2019 will come from cash flow generated by Boise, Idaho-based Micron’s payment for chips made by Elpida, according to a statement today. Micron shares rose.

Acquiring Elpida, an Apple Inc. supplier, would double Micron’s share of the global market for DRAM, the most widely used memory chips in personal computers, to about 24 percent. That would help Micron vie with industry leader Samsung Electronics Co. while giving it greater control over supply gluts that have caused it to report losses amid falling prices.

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How Asia Will Fare if Europe Cracks

BY ALEX FRANGOS

As the Euro Zone Flirts With Disaster, Asian Economies Stand at Varying Degrees of Preparedness

HONG KONG—Greek elections may have assuaged fears of a European financial contagion spreading to Asia, at least for the moment. But as troubles brew in Spain, where borrowing costs shot up again Tuesday, and as Greece faces more painful cuts to meet bailout targets by September, many wonder who in Asia is most exposed should Europe’s economy and financial system finally crack.

Lessons from the 2008 financial crisis show that while all of Asia tends to get hit when the world economy shudders, the severity differs depending on which countries have the biggest trade and financial linkages to the rest …

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Nikkei ends at 5-week high, softer yen supports

By Dominic Lau TOKYO, June 21 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average broke above 8,800 for the first time in five weeks on Thursday, as sentiment was buoyed by a softer yen after the U.S. Federal Reserve held back from more aggressive stimulus steps to prop up the economy.

The benchmark Nikkei hit its highest closing level since May
17 and has recovered 7 percent from a six-month low on June 4.

Shrugging off a survey showing China’s vast manufacturing sector slowing for the eighth straight month, the Nikkei rose 0.8 percent to 8,824.07, driven by exporters, such as Honda Motor Co Ltd, up 3.5 percent, and Canon Inc, adding 1.4 percent. The Fed disappointed some investors by delivering only a limited expansion of monetary stimulus on Wednesday. It extended its “Operation Twist” beyond its original June expiration to the end of the year to boost the flagging U.S. recovery. It also cut its GDP growth estimates for the year.

“The fact they eased at all is a plus for the U.S. economy, while holding off on QE3 is good for the Japanese market as it didn’t strengthen the yen,” said Hideyuki Ishiguro, assistant manager of investment strategy at Okasan Securities.

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Evergrande stock tumbles on fraud accusation

By Chris Oliver, MarketWatch

HONG KONG (MarketWatch) — Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd. was drawn into the controversy over questionable accounting practices at listed Chinese companies Thursday, as its board denied allegations of financial impropriety leveled by the Los Angeles–based stock-commentary website Citron Research.

Evergrande
Signing ceremony for the development projects of Chongjiang Jiangjin Evergrande Splendor International Skiing Health Resort and Chongqing Yucai Middle School n January 2012.

The Hong Kong–listed shares of Evergrande HK:3333 -11.38%  EGRNF -6.14% ended down 11.4% at 3.97 Hong Kong dollars (51 U.S. cents), shedding 51 Hong Kong cents from its previous session’s close, and paring an earlier, steeper drop of as much as 88 Hong Kong cents.

Citron said in summary research posted on its website that it had concluded that Guangzhou-based Evergrande is “essentially an insolvent company that has consistently presented fraudulent information to the investing public.”