12:42 PM
After Knight's Fall, Does Your Broker Have a Kill Switch?
Advanced Trading: You have a solution called ExpressWay E-Brake that allows brokers to either automatically or manually stop a trade after it's been executed. Are any brokers using this kill switch today?
Michael Chin, Mantara:
Knight Capital isn't the only financial firm to fall flat. Check out Wall Street's Biggest tech Fails.
Advanced Trading: Does a buy side firm buy this tool or is this provided by the brokers?
Chin:
As you saw with the Knight Trading episode, the sell side has not focused on automated trading strategies internally but when it comes to market making, it relied heavily on automated trading strategies. The Knight Capital issue has highlighted that these strategies can run amok and cause the same repercussions to the market that the SEC was trying to resolve by putting more parameters and brakes around sponsored access. The sell side has been slow in adopting their own internal controls.
We have two clients that had the foresight to build this particular product for their own use and in ways that would have prevented these runaway algos to a client that hadn't incorporated them.
Advanced Trading: Who's responsible for hitting the kill switch - the broker or the buy side client?
Chin:
Advanced Trading: Does it kill the entire trade or the portion of trade that has not been executed?
Chin:
Advanced Trading: So it's not a human being hitting a red button?
Chin:
What we do for the manual option, the client sets the risk parameters but they put in a buffer in that allows them to see if their risk parameter is getting close to 80 percent being violated. They can view it, monitor it a little more closely and then make a decision on whether they are going to manually kill it or they are going to let it go through.
Advanced Trading: Have your brokerage clients actually used the kill switch?
Chin:
Advanced Trading: I would assume that a firm as smart as Knight Capital would have a kill switch in place. Am I being naïve?
Chin:
People are focusing on this 45-minute period that they knew things were going awry but they weren't able to respond for 45 minutes to make any decisions. This is leading people to believe - and I think there are more facts coming out - that it was a matter of not being able to kill the strategy in a very easy way.
Advanced Trading: Why - because the strategy was so complex and widespread? It wasn't a simple order like "Go out and buy 10,000 shares of Dell"?
Chin:
Advanced Trading: What else do you think happened?
Chin:
From what I can tell, it was a lack of visibility into the overall - not the trades themselves - but that aggregation of these trades and not being able to see the result of multiple trades.
Advanced Trading: Do you think that we will see more runaway algos in the future? Could there be a repeat of what happened at Knight Capital?
Chin:
That said, there will be a heavy internal compliance audit of these automated trading strategies and market-making trading strategies that are inherent in a number of firms on Wall Street and across the world. People will be quick to adopt some internal controls and solutions. I think that people are going to be very conservative about how they approach this going forward. They need to gain back the confidence of the investors and are putting real time checks across these strategies. This is a wake-up call for all the market participants.
Phil Albinus is the former editor-in-chief of Advanced Trading. He has nearly two decades of journalism experience and has been covering financial technology and regulation for nine years. Before joining Advanced Trading, he served as editor of Waters, a monthly trade journal ... View Full Bio