Nasdaq Apologizes for Trading Disruption, Cites NYSE as Catalyst
"Nasdaq OMX is deeply disappointed in the events of August 22 and our performance is unacceptable to our members, issuers, and the investing public," the exchange admits in a statement posted on its website. "While getting to 100 percent performance in all of our activities, including our technology is difficult ─ it is our objective."
The report gives a run down of the series of events that led to the shut down of the Nasdaq, which occured when its Securities Information Processor (SIP) broke down, and market data dissemination was halted.
Interlinked Issues
Nasdaq squarely points the finger at NYSE Euronext, saying that its NYSE Arca exchange ─ formerly known as the Archipelago Exchange ─ began looping connection and disconnection requests at Nasdaq's sytems, eventually overloading the capacity of the SIP.
"On August 22, the SIP received more than 20 connect and disconnect sequences from NYSE Arca, each of which consumed significant resources," Nasdaq says. "Available capacity was further eroded as the SIP received a stream of quotes for inaccurate symbols from NYSE Arca, and generated quote rejects. Both of these actions served to degrade the system below the tested capacity of 10,000 messages per port, per second. During this period, NYSE Arca sent multiple bursts with each connect and disconnect, topping more than 26,000 quote updates per port, per second as it attempted to reconnect. By comparison, a typical August day for NYSE Arca would peak at less than 1000 messages per port, per second. The events of August 22 were 26 times greater than the average per port, per second activity."
This, the exchange says, revealed what it referred to as a "latent flaw" in its software code. This flaw prevented redundancy facilities from failing over, which in turn delayed system messages. The issue was so severe that Nasdaq, which, as an exchange, has a legal duty to operate an orderly market, made the call to halt trading. The feeds were re-established within 30 minutes, but testing and consultation were required before the market could re-open, requiring the extra time.
As the Securities Information Processor (SIP) for NASDAQ stocks, we are responsible for them, regret them, and intend to take all steps necessary to address them to enhance stability and functionality of the markets. - Nasdaq OMX
High-frequency trading (HFT), suggested by some commentators as being a cause after Nasdaq CEO Bob Greifeld made cryptic remarks about outside parties having a hand in the disruption soon after, had nothing to do with the glitch, the exchange said.
Alarmed
NYSE Euronext press officers in London declined to comment on Nasdaq's statements, instead referring inquiries to their colleagues in New York, which was out of office hours at the time of writing.
The shut down of Nasdaq's primary market came as the markets were rocked earlier in the week by a technology glitch at Goldman Sachs, which caused large numbers of erroneous buy orders to be sent into the US options markets. Given the proliferation of Nasdaq stocks on other markets such as bank-operated dark pools and internal crossing networks, as well as their use in complex basket products, and the pricing information used by other exchanges that comes from Nasdaq, the shut-down had a wider effect than simply halting trading in one place. President Obama, according to White House spokespeople, was briefed on the situation as it unfolded.
In addition to the Goldman Sachs error, trading was halted earlier in August on Direct Edge, the third-largest stock exchange in the US. Eurex, the derivatives market owned by Deutsche Borse, halted trading due to an unrelated glitch, while the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) also had a disruption due to data issues, leading to heightened concerns over the stability of technology in the US capital markets.
Mary Jo White, chair of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), announced that she would be convening a meeting of industry heads following the Nasdaq outage, scheduled for September 12. The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is also holding a meeting of its Technology Advisory Committee on the same day, where it is expected to discuss HFT oversight.
The Bottom Line
- Nasdaq's disruption, according to the exchange, was due to its SIP being overloaded by requests from NYSE Arca.
- Despite this, the exchange accepts responsibility for the outage, which occurred on August 22.
- The feed was restored within 30 minutes, but further testing and consultation required more time to re-open trading.
- The SEC will convene a meeting on September 12 to discuss the technical issues that led to the market shut-down, among other areas of market infrastructure.
Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.
To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@waterstechnology.com or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.waterstechnology.com/subscribe
You are currently unable to print this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
More on Trading Tech
Bloomberg offers auto-RFQ chat feed—but banks want a bigger prize
Traders hope for unfettered access to IB chat so they can build their own AI-enhanced trading tools
TMX launches ATS in US
The move represents the first expansion of the exchange group’s markets business outside of Canada.
AI co-pilot offers real-time portfolio rebalancing
WealthRyse’s platform melds graph theory, neural networks and quantum tech to help asset managers construct and rebalance portfolios more efficiently and at scale.
Opra considers ‘dynamic load balancing’ for options market
The data distributor recently completed a challenging project to build a 96-line feed. This new endeavor could prove just as challenging (but perhaps necessary) for the industry that will use it.
Big questions linger as DORA compliance approaches
The major EU regulation will go live tomorrow. Outstanding clarifications and confusion around the definition of an ICT service, penetration testing, subcontracting, and more remain.
Market data for private markets? BlackRock sees its big opportunity
The investment giant’s CEO said he envisions a far bigger private market business in 2025.
8 bank CTOs and CDOs sound off on artificial intelligence
Waters Wrap: Last year, WatersTechnology spoke with heads of technology and data from a range of tier-1 banks. Anthony pulls at one common thread from those interviews: AI.
Artificial intelligence, like a CDO, needs to learn from its mistakes
The IMD Wrap: The value of good data professionals isn’t how many things they’ve got right, says Max Bowie, but how many things they got wrong and then fixed.