Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Wall Street to get graded on how much spoofing it enables

Wall Street to get graded on how much spoofing it enables

[WASHINGTON] US regulators have grown so concerned that traders are using high-speed computers to manipulate markets that they're planning a new tactic to clamp down on the practice - rating brokers on how much spoofing flows through their order books.
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority said it plans to issue report cards this year that will grade firms on how many phony bids to buy or sell stock they might have a role in facilitating. Finra, a market cop funded by Wall Street, expects brokers to use the assessments to root out any misconduct, the regulator said on Tuesday in its annual letter on exam priorities. The reports won't be made public.
Spoofers flood a market with fake orders that entice other traders to change their posted prices, then cancel their orders and profit by buying or selling at the artificially low or high prices they induced.
Finra's plan to write up report cards shows how deeply regulators fear the bait-and-switch has infected trading following high-profile cases such as that of London's Navinder Sarao, who was arrested in April after authorities accused him of spoofing that contributed to the 2010 flash crash for US stocks.
The report cards will flesh out cases in which Finra suspects a trader has spread their phony orders across different brokers, mainly to obscure the strategy from Wall Street firms and regulators. The assessments will focus on spoofing and another abusive practice known as layering, which also involves traders submitting orders that they have no intention of following through on.
"The persons that are doing this are becoming more sophisticated and they are using multiple firms to effect their strategy," Finra chief executive officer Rick Ketchum said in an interview on Tuesday.
Rigged Markets?
Efforts to reduce spoofing have gone global with both Chinese securities regulators and US presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton proposing that traders pay a fee for habitual order cancellations.
For every 27 orders placed on US stock exchanges, about one is filled, according data from the US Securities and Exchange Commission. In other words, approximately 96 per cent of all orders sent to US equity markets are never executed.
Finra's responsibilities include monitoring trading and quote submissions across all US stock exchanges for suspicious activity. The agency last year referred the largest number of incidents of suspected spoofing in its history to the SEC, Mr Ketchum said.
In 2014, Wedbush Securities Inc admitted wrongdoing in agreeing to pay US$2.44 million to settle SEC claims that it didn't have policies to prevent customers from routing manipulative orders through the firm's trading platforms.
"It's a meaningful problem," Mr Ketchum said. "Our tools are more sophisticated now so we are identifying more of the actual efforts."
Critics of high-frequency trading cite the high number of canceled orders as evidence that markets are unfair, or worse, rigged.
But some academics and financial firms argue that spoofing can actually be used as a defense against manipulation and that only traders using super-fast computers are hurt by it. Because spoofing usually happens in milliseconds, traders with longer time horizons usually can't react to the rapid-fire price quotes.
BOND MARKUPS
Some high-frequency traders have also said that restricting order cancellations might unfairly punish firms that are innocently using computer formulas to update the prices at which they offer to buy and sell securities. The firms argue that they have to withdraw orders because the speed at which stock markets now move makes many quotes irrelevant almost immediately.
The first report cards will be sent to brokers as soon as next month, Mr Ketchum said. They will be sent to firms "where we are seeing a lot of this activity," he added.
"The first line of defense is always the firms," Mr Ketchum said. "The best way to stop this is for the firms to refuse to do business" with traders trying to manipulate markets.
Finra also plans to continue examining price markups on corporate bonds sold to retail investors, Mr Ketchum said. The effort focuses on instances in which bond dealers match retail buyers and sellers without assuming much risk themselves while extracting a commission that isn't often disclosed to customers.
Finra plans to issue a related rule proposal for approval by the SEC within two months that would require disclosure of markups on customer documents, he said.
The agency is trying to harmonize its proposal with one drafted by the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, which oversees trading rules for municipal bonds.
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China to keep share sales ban in effect until new rules promulgated

China to keep share sales ban in effect until new rules promulgated

[SHANGHAI] China will keep in effect its ban on share sales by listed companies' major shareholders until the government publishes new rules on such share disposals, the Shanghai Securities News reported on Wednesday.
China's stock market slumped 7 per cent on Monday, partly triggered by fears that a six-month ban on share sales by listed companies' major shareholders, imposed during the height of a market rout last year, will expire on Jan 8, unlocking an estimated 1.24 trillion yuan (S$272 billion) worth of shares.
China's securities regulator said on Tuesday that it was studying new rules to restrict share sales by listed companies'major shareholders to ensure an orderly exit.
REUTERS
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30 listed Chinese firms say big shareholders to extend selling ban

30 listed Chinese firms say big shareholders to extend selling ban

[SHANGHAI] A total of 30 Chinese listed companies have said so far that their controlling shareholders or senior executives would not sell shares on the secondary market within the next six or 12 months to help stabilise China's stock market after Monday's 7 per cent slump, the official Shanghai Securities News reported on Wednesday.
The market slump on Monday was partly triggered by fears that a six-month ban on share sales by listed companies' major shareholders, imposed during the height of a market rout last year, will expire on Jan 8, unlocking an estimated 1.24 trillion yuan (S$271.5 billion) worth of shares.
Most of the 30 companies which announced extensions of the share sale ban were privately-run firms, according to the newspaper.
They include Zhejiang Century Huatong Group Co Ltd, Shandong Sun Paper Industry Co Ltd, Zheijiang Sanhua Co Ltd and Changshu Tianyin Electromechanical Co Ltd.
REUTERS

China's Wanda to invest US$2.3b in hospital developments

China's Wanda to invest US$2.3b in hospital developments

[SHANGHAI] China's Wanda Group will invest 15 billion yuan (S$3.27 billion) in hospital developments around the country, the property and investment firm said in a statement on Wednesday, tapping into a reform drive to give private firms a larger role in healthcare.
The deal will see Wanda invest in and build three hospitals in the major cities of Shanghai, Chengdu and Qingdao, which will be managed by British-based healthcare operator International Hospital Group (IHG), Wanda said.
The investment plays into China's wider healthcare reform drive, with Beijing hoping to attract more private money into the sector to reduce the burden on creaking public hospitals and trim a healthcare bill set to hit US$1.3 trillion by 2020.
Wanda's billionaire chairman Wang Jianlin said the developments would help satisfy "the growing healthcare needs of the country's affluent population," as well as help the sector more widely by bringing overseas experience into the market. "(It) also helps the cities in which these projects are located to elevate their healthcare standards to international levels, and to serve as role models for the development of premium healthcare in China," he said.
Building for two of the hospitals will start in the first quarter of 2016. Construction of the complex housing the third hospital has already begun and should be completed by 2018.
While state-run hospitals still dominate the market, there has been an explosion in the number of private facilities over the past few years as China's government relaxed rules for private investment.
This has seen the entry of firms including US-based Chinaco Healthcare, Germany's Artemed Group, China's Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group Co, investment firm TPG Capital Management LP and property developers China Vanke Co and Evergrande Real Estate Group.
China's hospital privatisation drive still faces hold-ups, however, with a lack of doctors willing to leave the public sector and push-back from state-owned institutions and companies hindering reforms.
IHG, which has operated healthcare projects in over 50 countries, said it will appoint foreign specialists to act as directors for the three hospitals and select top doctors to ensure high quality of care.
REUTERS

Oil prices up in Asia ahead of US crude inventories report

Oil prices up in Asia ahead of US crude inventories report

[SINGAPORE] Oil prices edged higher in Asia Wednesday, ahead of the release of a US stockpiles report, with investors also keeping an eye on a worsening diplomatic row between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
The US Department of Energy will release later Wednesday its weekly inventory of commercial crude, with analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News expecting an increase of 500,000 barrels.
At around 0320 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in February was up six cents at US$36.03 and Brent was six cents higher at US$36.48. Both contracts closed lower on Tuesday.
Despite Wednesday's price uptick, the market mood remains bearish, said Daniel Ang, an analyst with Phillip Futures in Singapore.
The deepening diplomatic spat between key producers Iran and Saudi Arabia remains a factor affecting prices "but the market is oversupplied and traders are looking for opportunities to sell", he told AFP.
Kuwait on Tuesday recalled its ambassador to Tehran and Bahrain severed air links as the diplomatic crisis over Saudi Arabia's execution of a prominent Shiite cleric escalated, sparking international concern about regional instability.
In a separate commentary, Ang said weak global demand and an ongoing supply glut will continue to be a key influence on prices over the long term.
"Judging from how oil supply and demand (situation) is not expected to improve at least in the first half of 2016, it would suggest that oil prices would continue being bearish," he said.
AFP

Chinese farmers are illegally growing GMO corn: Greenpeace

Chinese farmers are illegally growing GMO corn: Greenpeace

[BEIJING] Farmers are illegally growing genetically modified corn in China's northeast, said environmental non-profit Greenpeace on Wednesday, in a report that may generate further distrust of the government's ability to ensure a safe food supply.
Beijing has spent billions of dollars to develop GMO crops that it hopes will ensure food supplies for its 1.4 billion people but has not yet approved commercial cultivation amid deep-seated anti-GMO sentiment.
The new findings seem to confirm concerns that Beijing will be unable to supervise the planting of GMO crops once commercial cultivation is permitted, leading to widespread contamination of the food chain with GM varieties.
In its report, Greenpeace said 93 per cent of samples taken last year from corn fields in five counties in Liaoning province, part of China's breadbasket, tested positive for GMO contamination.
Furthermore, almost all of the seed samples taken from grain markets and samples of corn-based foods at supermarkets in the area also tested positive. "It is very likely that much of the illegal GE corn has already entered grain storage warehouses, wholesale and retail markets across the country, ultimately ending up in citizens' food," said Greenpeace in a report.
While Greenpeace said it was not clear how the GMO corn seeds got into the marketplace, it has long been alleged that GMO plants being tested in field trials have been illegally sold to farmers for commercial use.
Such reports have intensified public opposition to the technology, with some anti-GMO campaigners going as far as suing the government over the failure to disclose information about its approvals for imported GMO crops and plans to allow domestic cultivation.
Among the six corn seed strains that tested positive in the Liaoning seed market, three have not been certified by China's agriculture ministry, while three others were certified as conventional seeds and therefore had been contaminated by GMO varieties, said the organisation.
The agriculture ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment on the Greenpeace report.
The ministry said last year it was changing regulations to increase supervision of biotech products under development.
The GMO corn strains identified in the survey belong to international companies Monsanto, Syngenta and Du Pont Pioneer, said Greenpeace. None of the companies responded to emailed requests for comment.
Greenpeace blamed an "extremely lax and disorganised" seed market management system for the production and sale of illegal seed varieties.
It said many small seed breeders are not aware of the names of seeds they are breeding on behalf of other companies nor whether the origins of the seeds are legal.
Greenpeace recommends that the government investigate all corn breeding companies and destroy illegal GMO seeds. Additionally, there should be annual inspections of crops in north China during the sowing season, and tougher supervision of GMO crop research and cultivation. It says farmers should be compensated for their losses if GMO crops are destroyed.
The new findings could make Beijing even more cautious about proceeding with commercialisation of any GMO crops, frustrating international and domestic seed firms.
Proponents of biotech crops in China argue that commercialising GMO products will reduce the need for farmers to resort to unapproved varieties to boost their yields.
REUTERS

US production a 'game changer' in oil market: API

US production a 'game changer' in oil market: API

[WASHINGTON] The top US oil lobby said Tuesday that the oil market's muted response to the escalating crisis between Saudi Arabia and Iran shows US production has been a "game changer." The United States now is the world's number one crude-oil producer and is "poised to remain a dominant global player, something that was unseen just a decade ago," said Jack Gerard, president and chief executive of the American Petroleum Institute, in an annual speech outlining the state of the industry.
Oil prices extended losses on Tuesday amid the Saudi-Iran diplomatic row as worries about global oversupplies trumped concerns about a potential impact on Middle East oil producers.
Citing experts, Mr Gerard noted that price behavior would have been "much different" years ago in response to conflict in the oil-rich region.
"Our abililty to compete in those markets is a game changer," he said.
Mr Gerard accused President Barack Obama's administration of burdening the oil and natural gas industry with regulations -"almost 100 pending regulations and counting" - that could hinder the president's goal of improving the environment.
"As the president's last full year in office begins, we hope that he will take note of and help foster the US model," Mr Gerard said.
The API says its so-called US model involves increasing production, lowering costs for American consumers and promoting a cleaner environment.
"Simultaneously, the United States is leading the world in energy production, we have one of the strongest Western economies and we are leading the world in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, a trifecta of success unmatched by any other nation," Mr Gerard said.
According to the lobbying group, the American oil and natural gas industry supports about US$1.2 trillion in gross domestic product, close to the size of the Mexican economy.
It cited a 2015 study by Wood Mackenzie that showed with the "right" energy policies, the industry could support up to an additional one million US jobs in 2025.
Among API's top political priorities for 2016 is amending or repealing the renewable fuel standard program, which Congress launched in 2005 in a bid to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and reduce the country's reliance on imported oil.
The RFS program, which requires oil companies to blend increasing volumes of renewable fuels into transportation fuel, is "a relic of our nation's era of energy scarcity and uncertainty," Mr Gerard said.
He stressed that, counter to some environmentalists' desire to see fossil fuels remain in the ground, the Department of Energy expects they will account for 80 per cent of US energy consumption through 2040.
Still, the group wants an environment that will "allow all energy sources to compete." In a dig at Mr Obama, Mr Gerard said the president "used to say" his administration has an all-of-the-above energy strategy.
He blasted Mr Obama's decision in November to reject the Keystone XL pipeline project that would have brought Canadian oil into the US.
"The demonisation of the Keystone XL pipeline remains a powerful cautionary tale of the dangers of energy policy driven by ideology rather than economic reality and has a chilling effect on expansion efforts for our nation's energy infrastructure," he said.
But he hailed the lifting of the 40-year-old ban on crude exports by Congress in December, a goal of the API, as "a victory of long-term vision and fact-based policymaking over political ideology and ideological dogma."
AFP

Ringgit falls as China's lower fixing spurs Asia risk aversion

Ringgit falls as China's lower fixing spurs Asia risk aversion

[KUALA LUMPUR] The ringgit fell to a seven-week low after China cut the yuan's fixing for a seventh day, fueling concern that a slowdown in the region's biggest economy will crimp demand for Malaysian exports.
China's lower reference rate caused risk aversion across Asian markets along with the possibility that North Korea tested a nuclear device following the detection of a 5.1-magnitude earthquake. The country's central news agency later confirmed it had done so. The yuan traded in Hong Kong declined to a five- year low on speculation China will favor currency depreciation to spur growth.
"Since the Chinese currency is weakening, it signals that Chinese demand will be weak," said Sean Yokota, Singapore-based head of Asia strategy at Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB. "The North Korea news is also weakening Asian currencies."
The ringgit dropped 0.6 per cent to 4.3705 a dollar as of 11:24 am in Kuala Lumpur and earlier fell to 4.3783, the lowest level since Nov 19, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg. The currency declined the most in Asia last year amid a slump in commodities, a political scandal involving Prime Minister Najib Razak and concern about rising debt at a state investment company.
The yield on Malaysia's government bonds maturing in 2019 rose three basis points to 3.34 per cent, prices from Bursa Malaysia show.
China is Malaysia's second-biggest overseas market and official data on Thursday may show shipments from the Southeast Asian nation rose 12 per cent in November from a year earlier, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. They increased 16.7 per cent in October.
The regime in Pyongyang detonated a hydrogen device at the Punggye-ri underground test site in the far northeast, its official Korean Central News Agency said.
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North Korea says tested hydrogen nuclear device

North Korea says tested hydrogen nuclear device

[SEOUL] North Korea said it had successfully conducted a test of a miniaturised hydrogen nuclear device on Wednesday morning.
The announcement on North Korean state TV followed detection of a 5.1 magnitude earthquake near its known nuclear test site earlier on Wednesday.
The nuclear test is the fourth by the isolated country, which is under US and UN sanctions for its nuclear and missile programmes.
REUTERS

China's anti-graft body investigates Changjiang Securities chairman

China's anti-graft body investigates Changjiang Securities chairman

[SHANGHAI] Chinese brokerage Changjiang Securities Co Ltd said on Wednesday its chairman Yang Zezhu was being investigated by the Communist Party's anti-corruption agency for possible discipline violations.
The move comes as authorities work to restore confidence in the stock market after a fumbled intervention and suspicion of irregular trading following market turmoil which began in June.
Since then, authorities have swept up market participants, journalists, fund managers and social media commentators in a crackdown on alleged market manipulation.
In an exchange filing, the brokerage said it received the investigation notice on Tuesday from the Communist Party's Commission for Discipline Inspection in Hubei province.
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The brokerage did not say why Yang was being investigated, saying only that it was for "personal reasons", and that the company's operations were normal.
Chinese officials usually use the term "discipline violations" as a euphemism for corruption.
Changjiang shares fell around 2 per cent in early trading on Wednesday.
Changjiang is the latest Chinese brokerage to be targeted by the anti-graft watchdog.
Several senior executives at rival CITIC Securities Co Ltd have been investigated for possible breaches of the law.
Since assuming office three years ago, Chinese President Xi Jinping has waged a war against deep-seated corruption that has brought down numerous senior officials.
REUTERS

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