Citi says trader error behind flash crash in European stocks

    • CITIGROUP said its London trading desk was behind a flash crash in Europe, which had sent shares across the continent tumbling after a sudden 8 per cent decline in Swedish stocks.
    • CITIGROUP said its London trading desk was behind a flash crash in Europe, which had sent shares across the continent tumbling after a sudden 8 per cent decline in Swedish stocks. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, May 3, 2022 · 08:32 AM

    CITIGROUP said its London trading desk was behind a flash crash in Europe, which had sent shares across the continent tumbling after a sudden 8 per cent decline in Swedish stocks.

    “This morning one of our traders made an error when inputting a transaction,” the New York-based bank said late Monday (May 2) in an emailed statement. “Within minutes, we identified the error and corrected it.”

    Citigroup is in talks with regulators and exchanges about the incident, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be named discussing non-public information.

    A knee-jerk sell-off in OMX Stockholm 30 Index in 5 minutes wreaked havoc in bourses stretching from Paris to Warsaw toppling the main European index by as much as 3 per cent and wiping out 300 billion euros (S$436.8 billion) at one point.

    A spokesman for Nasdaq Stockholm had said the short-lived slump was not a technical glitch on its part.

    “Our first priority was to exclude technical issues in our systems, and our second priority was to exclude an external attack on our systems. We have now excluded both,” said David Augustsson, a spokesman for Nasdaq Stockholm. 

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    “It is very clear to us that the cause of this move in the market is a very substantial transaction made by a market participant,” he said.

    The OMX Stockholm 30 Index closed 1.9 per cent lower, roughly in line with a drop in European markets. It had slumped as much as 8 per cent in just 5 minutes before recovering most of the losses shortly after.

    The error could potentially cause monetary and reputational damage to Citi as Nasdaq said it will not cancel any trades made on the Nordic markets.

    Joakim Bornold, savings economist at Soderberg & Partners, said that equity markets can be very sensitive to erroneous trades despite safeguards. BLOOMBERG

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