You're right. Heads should roll for allowing this to happen. Every one of those execs should be out of work on monday morning. No precautions? No safety limits? What kind of an exchange is this? 'We didn't think..........' Well, get someone who knows how to think. triple
I dont see wht the big deal is Trades are as they were entered, not as they were intended, and whatever happens, happens It's one (of the many) hazards of trading
imo, there should be a consistent ruling for this throughout the exchanges. sure, they may say that if the spike is due to this or that, they'll bust trade, but at the time it happens, you don't know for sure if it is something they'll bust trades over. there needs to be a clear ruling one way or the other, so that when spikes happen, traders can act on them consistently, and with certainty, so that there is not this confusion all the time. the more i think about this, the more i agree with swtrader, above. yeah, it sucks when you get burned, but it can benefit you as well.
It's rather hard to believe also that the firms themselves don't have failsafes against huge mis-trades built into their software. I guess it's conceivable that there might be instances when a firm might really want to dump 1000 contracts or 10000 or 100000 instantly, but it wouldn't take the world's greatest software genius to build such an option if really needed, while the main order entry system at least required a confirmation before executing orders in excess of some reasonable upper limit. Maybe it's some macho thing - the traders get a thrill out of the idea that, at any moment, they could enter an order that would produce panic and financial carnage. Or maybe it's just everyday stupidity. As for the issue of exchange rules, I already stated earlier that I believe both the circumstances and the procedures for busting trades should be clarified explicitly. It also shouldn't take several hours to announce the decision. If a firm makes a mis-trade that it expects to get busted, it should be required to report it immediately, and the exchange should announce any decision to bust trades very soon thereafter. Facilitating this process would require that the conditions, rationales, and precise procedures for busting trades, and for assigning levels at which trades may be busted, would be spelled out clearly - something which would serve traders and exchanges alike. The events on Friday leave the impression that first an "uh-oh" squad is assembled, that some time passes during which the cricumstances of the "event" are verified, and that some obscure process of negotiation occurs during which the potential impacts of various approaches are then compared - all before the nature of the event is revealed to the outside world. You have to wonder who if anyone outside the exchange is allowed input on the decision, what conflicts of interest arise, and whose a's are being c'd and in what order of priority. Does anyone know exactly how and why the bust levels on YM were chosen this time around, for instance? If anyone can provide or direct me to a full explanation, I'd be very interested. It seems to me that even the CME rules that PG linked don't go far enough in these regards.
I don't believe for a second that large institutions don't have failsafes. They invest HUGE amounts of money into IT and software development. Even Realtick has a feature that you can set that pops up a window for a confirmation if your order goes over a user defined threshold.
I am not up more after the bust. My Profit/loss window on IB says I am but like I said, I think they are lost. Im sure it will correct by monday. My sell was 9074 and I covered at around 8890 I was just answering Sharps question. He had the same thing happen. IB is...IB. When I called them to find out were the trade stood they wouldnt tell me if I were flat or still short. They went out of thier way to tell me this was my problem. The rules are not made by us or for us. Thats just the way it is and we already know that.