Dow drops 1000points on trading error at brokerage firn

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • tltaylor89
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 06-19-09
    • 19610

    #1
    Dow drops 1000points on trading error at brokerage firn
    Whoever got AAPL at 199.60 has made a tidy profit.
  • Fishhead
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 08-11-05
    • 40179

    #2
    LOL...........what a country
    Comment
    • RealSlimShady
      SBR Hall of Famer
      • 12-24-07
      • 6249

      #3
      I think Proctor and Gamble traded down about $20 at some point on an electronic exchange. LOL!
      Comment
      • Sam Odom
        SBR Aristocracy
        • 10-30-05
        • 58063

        #4
        JJGold is behind the largest scalp in USA history!
        Comment
        • Brock Landers
          SBR Aristocracy
          • 06-30-08
          • 45359

          #5
          Talyor, S & P closed at 1128
          Comment
          • tltaylor89
            SBR Posting Legend
            • 06-19-09
            • 19610

            #6
            I never made so much money in 1 day
            Comment
            • Brock Landers
              SBR Aristocracy
              • 06-30-08
              • 45359

              #7
              Originally posted by tltaylor89
              I never made so much money in 1 day
              is this the biggest intraday swing ever??

              -1000 to -350
              Comment
              • tltaylor89
                SBR Posting Legend
                • 06-19-09
                • 19610

                #8
                The market bounced so fast because all hedge fund managers took all the money they have and brought the market.
                Comment
                • tltaylor89
                  SBR Posting Legend
                  • 06-19-09
                  • 19610

                  #9
                  Landers I haven't seen a swim this big since 2008.
                  Comment
                  • str
                    SBR Posting Legend
                    • 01-12-09
                    • 11823

                    #10
                    Is there an 8X rollover like Colt has to deal with?
                    Comment
                    • tltaylor89
                      SBR Posting Legend
                      • 06-19-09
                      • 19610

                      #11
                      Aapl swung to 201.25 and we hammer for 6.8 million shares.
                      Comment
                      • tltaylor89
                        SBR Posting Legend
                        • 06-19-09
                        • 19610

                        #12
                        Guy sold billions of shares of stock at Citi
                        Comment
                        • tltaylor89
                          SBR Posting Legend
                          • 06-19-09
                          • 19610

                          #13
                          I don't see a huge spike on the monitors
                          Comment
                          • pavyracer
                            SBR Aristocracy
                            • 04-12-07
                            • 82868

                            #14
                            Originally posted by tltaylor89
                            Aapl swung to 201.25 and we hammer for 6.8 million shares.
                            You traded 1.5 billion worth of stock today? OK Madoff..calm down!
                            Comment
                            • Brock Landers
                              SBR Aristocracy
                              • 06-30-08
                              • 45359

                              #15
                              Originally posted by pavyracer
                              You traded 1.5 billion worth of stock today? OK Madoff..calm down!
                              Comment
                              • robmpink
                                SBR Posting Legend
                                • 01-09-07
                                • 13205

                                #16
                                Originally posted by pavyracer
                                You traded 1.5 billion worth of stock today? OK Madoff..calm down!
                                That was indeed, funny!
                                Comment
                                • wtf
                                  SBR Posting Legend
                                  • 08-22-08
                                  • 12983

                                  #17
                                  there was NO trading error, please read carefully


                                  May 6 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks tumbled the most in a year on concern Europe’s debt crisis will halt the global recovery. The selloff briefly erased more than $1 trillion in market value as the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell almost 1,000 points, its biggest percentage loss since 1987, before paring the drop.
                                  The Dow average ended down 347.8 points, or 3.2 percent, at 10,520.32 at 5:50 p.m. in New York. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell as much as 8.6 percent, its biggest intraday plunge since December 2008, before closing down 3.2 percent at 1,128.15. It was the biggest percentage drop on a closing basis since April 20, 2009, for both measures.
                                  “It’s panic selling,” said Burt White, chief investment officer at LPL Financial in Boston, which oversees $379 billion. “There’s concern that the European situation might cool down global growth and freeze the credit markets.”
                                  New York Stock Exchange spokesman Rich Adamonis said “there were a number of erroneous trades” during the plunge. The NYSE told CNBC that there were no system errors as speculation of bad trades swirled through the market. Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. said it is working with other markets to review transactions during the plunge.
                                  Citigroup Inc. said it found “no evidence” of erroneous trades after CNBC said the bank made a potentially bad transaction amid the Dow’s plunge of as much as 9.2 percent, its biggest intraday drop since Oct. 19, 1987. CNBC cited “multiple sources.”
                                  Procter & Gamble Co. said it’s looking into electronic trading of its stock to determine whether it was made in error. Its shares sank as much as 37 percent and closed down 2.3 percent.
                                  Euro Tumbles
                                  The euro tumbled the most since the collapse of credit markets in 2008, dropping 1.5 percent to $1.2620 at 5:10 p.m. in New York and touching a 14-month low of $1.2529, even as Greece’s parliament approved austerity measures demanded by the European Union and International Monetary Fund as a condition of its 110 billion euro ($139 billion) bailout.
                                  European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet held interest rates at a record low of 1 percent today and said the bank didn’t discuss whether to purchase government bonds to stem the region’s debt crisis, defying market speculation that he would take such measures.
                                  “The ECB can fix this instantly by doing what the Fed has done -- instantly providing liquidity by buying bad fixed-income instruments and paying cash in U.S. dollars,” said David Kovacs, head of quantitative strategies at Turner Investment Partners in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, which manages $18 billion. “The reason the market is horrified now is Trichet said it’s not even being discussed. Smart investors are basically selling risk assets.”
                                  2010 Gains Wiped Out
                                  The MSCI Asia Pacific Index joined the MSCI World Index and the Stoxx 600 Index in wiping out its advance for 2010. The Dow and S&P 500 briefly erased their yearly gains before paring losses.
                                  Bank of America Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. and American Express Co. tumbled more than 4.3 percent to help lead declines in the Dow as all 30 of its companies dropped at least 1.6 percent.
                                  General Electric Co., the world’s biggest maker of jet engines, power-generation equipment and locomotives, fell as much as 17 percent before ending down 4.4 percent. Apple Inc. tumbled as much as 22 percent, the most since 2000, and ended down 3.8 percent.
                                  Technology stocks and industrial companies in the S&P 500 had the biggest intraday declines on record, losing as much as 10 percent and 11 percent, respectively. Both groups ended down less than 3.4 percent.
                                  VIX Surges
                                  The benchmark index for U.S. stock options surged as much as 63 percent, the most since February 2007, to 40.7 before paring its advance to 32 percent and closing at an almost one- year high of 32.8. The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, measures the cost of using options as insurance against declines in the S&P 500.
                                  The S&P 500 moved in an 8.73 percent range between today’s intraday high and low, the widest since Nov. 20, 2008, when the VIX closed at a record 80.86.
                                  About 19.3 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, the most since October 2008 and more than double 2010 average. Almost 10 stocks fell for each that rose on U.S. exchanges.
                                  The MSCI World Index of stocks in 23 developed nations sank 2.8 percent and has plunged 6.4 percent in the past three days, its biggest retreat since in 14 months. The gauge ended at its lowest level since February, while the S&P 500 and the Dow closed at the lowest since March 4.
                                  Treasuries Surge
                                  The benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield plunged as much as 28 basis points to touch 3.26 percent, the lowest level since Dec. 2, before trading at 3.40 percent, down 14 basis points.
                                  The Dollar Index, which measures the currency against six major trading partners, jumped as much as 1.4 percent.
                                  Bonds of debt-laden European nations tumbled. The yield on Spain’s 10-year note surged 24 basis points, or 0.24 percentage point, to 4.42 percent, the highest since June. Italy’s 10-year yield jumped 22 basis points to 4.27 percent.
                                  The 10-year Greek bond yield surged 1.14 percentage points to 11.31 percent, the highest in Bloomberg data going back to 1998. The nation’s two-year debt surged 1.46 percentage points to 16.36 percent, also a record in Bloomberg data.
                                  German bunds gained, sending the yield premium investors demand to own Greek and Spanish 10-year debt instead of Europe’s benchmark bond to records.
                                  ‘All About Europe’
                                  A 110 billion-euro ($140 billion) aid package to avoid a default by Greece has failed to prevent bond yields from rising, driving up borrowing costs for countries including Spain and Portugal. Sovereign debt contagion may spread across Europe, affecting the banking systems of Portugal, Spain and Italy, as well as Greece, Moody’s Investors Service said in a report.
                                  “It’s all about Europe,” said Tom Wirth, senior investment officer for Chemung Canal Trust Co., which manages $1.6 billion in Elmira, New York. “There’s a perception that what’s going on in Europe will be dragging the region back into a recession. The question is how much of that is going to be contagious to the rest of the world.”
                                  Spain paid the highest yield since 2008 to sell five-year bonds. The Treasury sold 2.35 billion euros of the notes in an auction in Madrid to yield 3.532 percent. That was 0.716 percentage point more than it paid on similar securities in the most recent sale, nine weeks ago.
                                  Spanish Bonds
                                  Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero this week railed at investors who dumped Spanish bonds on concern that the rescue plan for Greece may not insulate other euro-region governments from the crisis. The premier is trying to reduce a budget deficit that’s almost four times the European Union’s limit and regain the confidence of fund managers.
                                  ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet resisted pressure from investors to take new steps to fight the euro-area’s spreading fiscal crisis.
                                  “We call for decisive actions by governments to achieving a lasting and credible consolidation of public finances,” Trichet told reporters today after the ECB’s Governing Council met in Lisbon. Spain and Portugal are “not Greece,” he said.
                                  Turmoil in financial markets also battered the market for initial public offerings.
                                  IPOs Hit
                                  Ron Burkle’s Americold Realty Trust postponed the largest U.S. initial public offering of 2010, while Hong Kong’s Swire Properties Ltd. shelved its sale as the biggest stock-market slump in a year roiled IPOs.
                                  Americold, the warehouse operator owned by Burkle’s Yucaipa Cos., pulled its $660 million sale after slashing the midpoint price by 33 percent yesterday, according to Bloomberg data and a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
                                  Swire Properties, landlord to Time Warner Inc. in Hong Kong, dropped its plan to raise as much as HK$20.8 billion ($2.7 billion). Smile Brands Group Inc., the Santa Ana, California- based provider of support services to dental groups, also shelved its $132 million IPO today.
                                  Crude oil fell to an 11-week low in New York, retreating 3.6 percent to $77.11 a barrel.
                                  Comment
                                  Search
                                  Collapse
                                  SBR Contests
                                  Collapse
                                  Top-Rated US Sportsbooks
                                  Collapse
                                  Working...