The India Flash Crash

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CASE STUDY – The India Flash Crash Date Authors

22nd October 2012 Hirander Misra, Chairman & Tony Harrop, MD – Forum Trading Solutions Limited

Sequence of Events

On 5th October the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) came to a halt after an event now referred to as the “India Flash Crash”. Early that day, one of the NSE members Emkay Global Financial Services (Emkay), entered a basket trade to sell 50 Scrip’s of Nifty and 9 other Scrips, and using their trading screen, entered the overall parameters of the basket trade, worth 650 Crore. This was automatically split into separate orders with quantities based on their pro-rata percentage constituent of the Nifty index. However, a human ‘fat-finger-like’ error incorrectly transcribed the value and quantity, resulting in extremely high amounts on each order. Immediately following that, once the large sell orders began to be executed, the value of Scrips started to plummet. The reduction in constituent company share value caused the Nifty Index (recalculated 3 times each second) to drop dramatically as well. This triggered an alert and the NSE finally halted trading. After 15 minutes, the NSE reopened the market and further erroneous ‘in-flight’ orders were executed causing further dramatic falls in Nifty securities which fell 16% and created panic among traders, with some unjustly highlighting concerns that high-speed traders had brought instability to the markets even though this was a manual trading error. The fact that Indian Exchanges do not have stock-specific circuit breakers exacerbated the issue, because circuit breakers were only applied based on the movement of their main index. This incident briefly shaved almost $70 billion off the value of some of the country's largest listed companies.

The NSE’s response th

(Quote: ft.com, 5 October 2012)

The NSE explained that operational issues were the reason why the market continued to fall to 16 per cent after the automatic cut-off had been breached: “The second it hits 10 per cent the market stops accepting new orders, but there are always orders in flight … but in a millisecond you will have thousands of orders that have already gotten through the gate prior to the market stoppage and they will need to complete their execution.”


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