Trading Glitch Briefly Sets Apple, Amazon and Microsoft Stock Prices at $123.47--3rd Update
04 July 2017 - 9:11PM
Dow Jones News
By Steven Russolillo
A flood of incorrect stock-market data briefly hit traders'
screens around the globe early Tuesday morning in Asia, showing
apparent huge moves in the Nasdaq-listed share prices of some of
the world's biggest companies including tech giants Apple Inc.,
Microsoft Corp. and Amazon.com Inc.
The faulty data on stock prices appeared on several platforms
including Yahoo Finance, Google Finance and on Bloomberg terminals
between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. Hong Kong time, after U.S. markets Monday
had closed early ahead of the Independence Day holiday.
As a result of the glitch, several stocks briefly showed their
price to be $123.47--equivalent to a 14% drop in Apple's shares, an
87% plunge for Amazon and a 79% surge for Microsoft.
If the moves had actually occurred, it would have knocked $104
billion off the market value of Apple, the world's most valuable
stock. Amazon's market cap would have dropped $396 billion, while
Microsoft's would have risen $415 billion.
The appearance of the incorrect data sparked disagreement over
who was to blame. A spokesman for Nasdaq said the problem was
caused by faulty test data being improperly disseminated by
third-party vendors including Bloomberg.
However, a person familiar with one of the vendors said Nasdaq
had changed its testing protocols but hadn't informed vendors ahead
of time.
An article that appeared early Tuesday on Bloomberg's website
initially said a Nasdaq error had caused the faulty data. The
report was subsequently corrected.
Joe Christinat, a Nasdaq spokesman, said no actual trades were
affected by the glitch.
"This is a vendor issue, not a Nasdaq issue," he said, noting
that other platforms such as FactSet and even Nasdaq.com showed
correct pricing data.
In an emailed statement, a Google representative said, "We can
confirm that our third-party finance data partner was providing
some inaccurate information, which they received from Nasdaq."
"This is currently being fixed and we hope to update our stock
price data shortly," Google said. According to the company's
website, the closing prices on Google Finance are provided by SIX
Financial Information and its intraday pricing data are provided by
Interactive Data Real-Time Services. However, Google declined to
confirm that these companies provide data to Google Finance.
A representative for SIX said its data feed wasn't the problem.
"We checked our data and it was correct," the representative said.
"No incorrect prices came from us."
Stock markets in the U.S. were open for only a half-day session
Monday and will be closed Tuesday in observance of Independence
Day. Aftermarket hours on Nasdaq, during which shares trade
following the close of the regular session, usually last for four
hours. The market typically closes at 4 p.m. ET.
Nasdaq's Mr. Christinat said Monday's early close at 1 p.m. ET
might have played a role in the confusion that prompted the
improper use and dissemination of test data, which he said is sent
out after every trading day.
"I've seen quite a few fat-finger incidents when you get a funny
price briefly," said Eric Moffett, a portfolio manager for the T.
Rowe Price Asia Opportunities Equity Fund in Hong Kong. "When I saw
the series of alerts, I figured something was up."
Mr. Moffett said he takes a long-term view on the stocks his
fund invests in, so any sharp moves in the market--whether from a
"fat finger" incident or not--likely won't prompt any significant
trading activity. Even so, he said the flurry of alerts related to
the pricing issues caught his attention.
"I immediately wondered with something like this if there was
some sort of cyberattack," Mr. Moffett said.
Mr. Christinat at Nasdaq said he didn't see any evidence of a
hack or a cyberattack affecting the erroneous pricing.
A spate of high-profile trading glitches have roiled markets in
recent years. In May 2010, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged
nearly 1000 points in a matter of minutes before rebounding quickly
in what widely became known as the "flash crash." In August 2013, a
technical glitch knocked out trading in all Nasdaq Stock Market
securities for three hours due to a problem with the data feed that
supplied trade information. In July 2015, a glitch forced the New
York Stock Exchange to halt trading for nearly four hours.
The difference this time is that no trades appear to have been
affected by the latest fiasco. A trader notice from Nasdaq said
"certain third parties improperly propagated test data that was
distributed as part of the normal evening test procedures." The
notice added: "All production data was completed by 5:16 p.m. ET as
expected per the early close of the markets. Any data messages
received post 5:16 p.m. should be deemed as test data and purged
from direct data recipient's databases."
A system status message posted on Nasdaq's website said "systems
are operating normally." However, not all stock quotes appeared to
be accurate. Shares in Nasdaq-listed biotech giant Amgen Inc. were
still being incorrectly shown down 28% at $123.45 on Google Finance
by late morning Asia time. The stock actually closed Monday at
$172.80.
Write to Steven Russolillo at steven.russolillo@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 04, 2017 06:56 ET (10:56 GMT)
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