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Thursday, September 3, 1998

Computer snag irks Cbot traders 

Shinichi Kishima  
Chicago, Sept 2: An input error on the Chicago Board of Trade's electronic trading system in Tuesday's overnight session fuelled fury among traders on the traditional open outcry floor, vocal opponents of computerized trading.

The traders said the incident in U.S. Treasury bond futures trading on the CBOT's Project A system was a proof that open outcry was more trusty than Screen-based trading.

The open outcry system has been threatened by a planned launch of a new all-electronic exchange next week and the CBOT's own plan to start concurrent electronic trading during regular hours.

"It can happen with any computer system," a floor trader for a commercial firm said.

The incident occurred when one firm apparently placed an order to sell about 1,500 contracts of December US T-bond futures, instead of a buy order, traders said. The erroneous order was blamed for the market's decline toward 126-3/32 from about 126-19/32 around 0530 CDT/1030 GMT.

Traders said the trades that resulted from that order weresubsequently nullified, leaving market-makers' hedge positions in cash treasuries and other instruments hanging dry.

"Some of my buddies, some of the firms that are market-makers...bought 08 (at 128-8/32) on the way down and they immediately sold cash," the commercial firm trader said. "Their trade's busted and now they have a position with only half a leg."

A CBOT spokesman confirmed an input error took place overnight, but declined to specify quantity or price levels.

"I can confirm that there was a trading input error and that the appropriate CBOT resolution committee addressed the error and took appropriate action," he said.

The incident comes on the heels of a similar highly publicised error at the French derivatives exchange MATIF several weeks ago after the Paris-based bourse scrapped its floor trading in favour of an electronic platform.

The CBOT's open outcry, traders said, input errors were bound to be repeated on Screen-based systems, while they might be prevented or dealt with afterwardin a more equitable manner in an open outcry marketplace.

Still, electronic trading has been the biggest topic in the futures industry this year, with EUREX, the all-electronic Swiss-German exchange, taking away the lion's share of the Bund futures business from the London International Futures and Options Exchange and MATIF converting to all-electronic.

Right now, all eyes are on the Sept. 8 launch of the Cantor Financial Futures Exchange (CFFE), a joint venture between Cantor Fitzgerald LP and the New York Board of Trade, which will electronically trade futures on Treasury securities that directly compete with CBOT products.

Copyright © 1998 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


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