Quantcast

May Stock Market "Flash Crash" Stems From Kansas Firm

2010_09_kansas.jpg Earlier this year, the stock market fell dramatically—the Dow lost 600 points in minutes— in the afternoon of May 6. The markets were already jittery, thanks to Greece's debt issues plaguing Europe, and the Dow fell 1,000 points. The NY Times reports that the SEC has found the "flash crash" was caused not by "any market manipulation but by a single firm trying to hedge its investment position, if in an aggressive and abrupt manner." Way to go, algorithms!

It said that at about 2:32 p.m., a mutual fund — which was not identified in the report, but which officials have identified as Waddell & Reed Financial of Kansas — started a program to sell 75,000 E-Mini Standard &Poor’s 500 futures contracts, using computer sell algorithms. Normally, a sale of this size would take place over as many as five hours, but the large sale was executed in 20 minutes, the regulators said.

The algorithm was programmed to execute the trade “without regard to price or time,” the report said.

The selling pressure was then transferred from the futures markets to the stock market, leading to the abrupt drop in individual stocks.

Stock and stock-index futures prices were already declining on May 6 when, about 2:42 p.m., they suddenly plunged by more than 5 percent over the next five minutes.

When prices bottomed at about 2:47 p.m., the Dow Jones industrial average was down nearly 990 points, 9.1 percent below where it had started the day. Almost as quickly as prices dropped, however, they rebounded, with the Dow industrials recovering 543 points in about 90 seconds. The Dow finished the day down 347.80, or 3.2 percent, at 10,520.32.


The Wall Street Journal has an interactive graphic about the flash crash.

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • John L

    Scary that something like that can happen and create so much volatility. It's even scarier that it took them 4 months to figure out what happened. Just goes to show you that in a matter of hours this country can go bankrupt, just like that.

  • bonu$baby

    Well very classy to not name the firm in the report but leak it to the press otherwise. Sounds like another government cover up to me. It's probably some 15 year old hacker in Beijing.

  • longacre

    The SEC should rethink their policy of letting dairy cows participate in the stock market.

  • matty

    the midwest is soooooooo laaaaaaame

    oh and go back to the midwest

    or something

  • hotstepper

    boring too, but that goes without saying. gothamist can't seem to get rid of you chicago interlopers. ;-)

  • theboneranger

    +1

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com