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Late Tuesday afternoon, Dow Jones Indexes
made a seemingly minor confession about a technical glitch that took
place earlier that day. Specifically, in the middle of Tuesday’s
market decline – beginning at 1:50 pm precisely – Dow Jones Indexes
began incorrectly reporting the Dow Jones Industrial Average (Dow).
In other words, instead of displaying say 12,200 - the actual trading
level of the 30-Dow components - the Dow was showing 12,350. Ever
vigilant, they eventually identified the problem and “switched over to
a back-up system” at 3:00PM.
Now there is no question that computers
sometimes do err: instances of market miscalculation and/or
miscommunication have dotted the financial ledger in the past - like
between the futures and cash markets during the crash of 1987. However,
and although a potentially innocent event, the interesting thing about
Tuesday’s computer malfunction is that it persisted without being
recognized for 70-minutes! The question to ask, naturally enough,
is what on earth was going on during this 70-minute interval?
70-Minutes In The Dark
What is most puzzling about this incident
is not that a tech-guy at Dow Jones Indexes may have went out to catch a
movie in the middle of a trading-day, but that the media and regulatory
bodies have failed to try and aggressively investigate whether anyone
profited excessively during the 70-minute period. Market
information is valuable, and if you knew that a 100+ point disparity
existed between the listed Dow price and the actual Dow price you could
have made a killing.
For its part, Dow Jones - which is
supposedly still reviewing the situation - has chosen to focus on the
contestable conclusions that the financial markets were not impacted by
the ‘unprecedented’ price adjustment at 3:00 PM, and that no
investors were hurt. As for the possibility of malfeasance,
nothing has been said.
Focusing on what they have said, the
lawyers at Dow Jones are ready to insist that nothing untoward or
unpleasant could possibly have happened:
“It is
important to understand that Dow Jones has no role in trading stocks or
pricing individual securities, including securities underlying our
Indexes. We are conducting a detailed review of yesterday’s events and
do not believe the calculation delay or the subsequent catch up in the
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) exacerbated the market decline, as
the market was down sharply during the 70-minute period and rebounded
strongly soon after the DJIA was brought current. We regret
yesterday’s unprecedented events and are taking remedial actions to
prevent their recurrence, but we have no reason to believe any investors
were harmed.” Dow
Jones, Feb 28, 07
The Dow is the most influential index in
the world, so the suggestion that not one single investor made an
investment based upon the erroneous data and then lost money after the
Dow’s startling 1-minute plunge is, of course, surprising to say the
least. But first, there is an even more pressing matter at hand.
How About Those Back-Ups!
“…the market's
extraordinarily heavy trading volume caused a delay in Dow Jones' data
systems. As a result, the calculation of the Dow Jones Industrial
Average temporarily lagged behind the market's decline. Dow Jones
Indexes identified the problem and switched over to a back-up system.”
That the NYSE logged more than 4 billion
in volume on February 27 would seem to support their contention that
‘extraordinary’ trading volume was the culprit behind the data
delay. Having said that, exactly how the system managed to cope
with the 3.9 billion shares traded on February 28, apparently without
problem, remains a mystery.
Suffice to say, the investment media
(which is controlled largely by Dow
Jones) has yet to discuss one of the most puzzling elements of the
above release:
Why and how were the back-up systems
able to negotiate the 'extraordinary' amount of volume? In other words,
if volume really caused the delay why were the back-ups also not
delayed???
Ever the public servant, Dow Jones has
put one person, the Global Head of Public Relations Sybille Reitz, on
the job of discussing this ultra-important matter with the media.
Ms. Reitz* answered – eventually - the question above with the
following:
“That is what we are
actually investigating.”
Conclusions & Conspiracy Fodder
Given that corruption has been known to
reside on Wall Street, isn’t it remarkable that every time a computer
starts choking on data everyone is quick to swallow the party line?
In essence, we are being told to accept
at face value that Dow Jones Index front-line computers take 70-minute
breaks because they are lazy, but that the trusty back-ups can
effortlessly tabulate every second worth of trades.

Instead of forming a team to help
investigate the event and punish those (if any) responsible, Fed
Chairman Bernanke accepted the party line and tried to sooth investor
apprehensions yesterday by claiming that the markets “seem to be
working well”.
“In the minutes
after Bernanke spoke, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose as much
as 1.2 percent before”
As the above quote aptly demonstrates,
the financial press does in fact like to talk about the markets in
seconds and minutes. But, curiously, no one is calling for
someone’s head over the most watched index in the world pumping out
incorrect data for more than hour.
In short, computers sometimes do err.
But what is surprising, and what gives conspiracy theorists a leg to
stand on, is that technical trading delays never seem to happen when
prices are rising. Computers do not know the difference between rising
and falling stocks prices, do they?
* We are not accusing Ms. Sybille Reitz
of being unresponsive to our questions. Rather, she has a mammoth
job to respond to media inquiries. In our opinion she could probably use
a back-up.


© 2007 Brady Willett
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