UK trader arrested for May 2010 U.S. Stock market flash crash

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by just21, Apr 21, 2015.

  1. TraDaToR

    TraDaToR

    That's just my opinion but the trust business is just the shadiest. . One of the worst person ( and former friend ) I met in my life is involved. Just like when you meet someone who insist he has "the best reputation" or can be trusted, here the simple trust word in the name is a red flag...
     
    #701     Feb 13, 2017
  2. bone

    bone

    If your life premise and your career are built upon the foundation of false pretenses and lies then some might say Karma bit him especially hard.
     
    #702     Feb 13, 2017
    Overnight likes this.
  3. just21

    just21

    Navinder Singh Sarao, the UK day trader guilty of “spoofing” stock index futures, has helped US prosecutors build a case in a broadening crackdown on market abuse. Criminal spoofing charges unsealed on Monday against Jitesh Thakkar, a technology consultant in Illinois, cite information obtained by a “Trader #1”. The unnamed trader was Mr Sarao, a person close to the matter and court filings said. Mr Sarao pleaded guilty in November 2016 to one count of wire fraud and one of spoofing, a tactic of misleading other traders by rapidly entering and cancelling orders. He pledged to co-operate with authorities as part of his plea agreement. The case against Mr Thakkar was announced alongside several other criminal spoofing charges in what the US justice department called its largest futures market criminal enforcement action. He was the only vendor to the futures industry to be charged, not a trader. Mr Sarao has not yet been sentenced. An affidavit filed in the Thakkar case said his co-operation with prosecutors could lead to a reduced sentence. Prosecutors labelled Mr Thakkar a co-conspirator for developing a trading program that enabled Trader #1 to spoof the e-mini S&P 500 futures contract on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. In a separate civil action, the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission charged Mr Thakkar with “aiding and abetting spoofing and a manipulative and deceptive scheme” with a Trader A in the same futures contract. James McDonald, the CFTC enforcement director, said: “In its effort to root out spoofing from our markets, the CFTC will work vigorously to hold accountable not only the individuals who engage in the spoofing, but also those who produce and sell the tools designed to spoof.” Mr Thakkar was arrested by law enforcement authorities Monday and could not be reached for comment. Mr Sarao’s lawyer did not immediately respond for comment. Mr Thakkar’s company, Edge Financial Technologies of Chicago, builds trading algorithms, high-speed trading platforms and “kill switches” for traders, among other products, according to its website. He served on a CFTC technology advisory committee from 2012 to 2014, the website said before his biographical page disappeared late on Monday. But between October 2011 and April 2015, federal authorities allege that Mr Thakkar was also conspiring with the trader to spoof the e-mini S&P market, according to the criminal complaint. The civil complaint against Mr Thakkar said he began working with Trader A after an October 12, 2011 email communication. The language of the communication is identical to an email from the same date between Mr Thakkar and Mr Sarao, which the CFTC had previously filed in its case against Mr Sarao. The criminal complaint against Mr Thakkar said his co-conspirator was a futures trader who lived in the UK and pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count of spoofing on November 9, 2016 — all facts that are unique to Mr Sarao. Authorities had blamed Mr Sarao’s aggressive trading for contributing to the 2010 “flash crash,” when US stock indices inexplicably plunged one afternoon. This week’s court filings indicate Mr Thakkar and Mr Sarao began working together more than a year later.

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2018. All rights reserved.
     
    #703     Jan 31, 2018
  4. southall

    southall

    So he grassed up his programmer?
     
    #704     Jan 31, 2018
    athlonmank8 and polaris like this.
  5. polaris

    polaris

    He's a cheat, a grass...and they're his better traits:cool:
     
    #705     Jan 31, 2018
    tomorton likes this.
  6. just21

    just21

  7. emails win again...
     
    #707     Jan 31, 2018
    athlonmank8 likes this.
  8. So one guy with a spoofing program living in his parents basement can have that big of an impact on the GLOBAL markets?

    In order for it to work, you have to have algo's front running or piggy-backing these orders. Who cares if these guys are being beat at their own game.

    Call me cynical, but I see spoofing as an excellent way to "stress test" a market. What the fuck does the CFTC care about this guy for when it sounds like the whole damn system needs to be fixed.

    Can someone give me a good reason why spoofing shouldn't be legal? Who's to decide what kind of order flow, and resting orders should be an element of price discovery??? It's CIRCULAR reasoning to begin with.....

    I can only imagine the kind of crap the CFTC hasn't found yet.....
     
    Last edited: Jan 31, 2018
    #708     Jan 31, 2018
    Macca1, EliteThink, d08 and 1 other person like this.
  9. let's not pretend anybody here wouldn't turn informer if faced with the prospect of doing 30 years in jail.
     
    #709     Jan 31, 2018
    TraDaToR, bone and athlonmank8 like this.
  10. Pekelo

    Pekelo

    Because you should mean it when you put an order in. What would be the reason to put through fake orders? Sure, everyone mistypes occasionally, but you don't make an accidental order 100 times a second...

    It is like you go to McD and order a big Mac meal for $9 and they would tell you, sorry that was a spoofed order and it is actually $11.5...
     
    #710     Jan 31, 2018
    tomorton likes this.