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China-Japan-Koreas
Bad Typing Costs Japanese Securities Co. $224 Million
2005-12-09
CLUMSY typing cost a Japanese bank at least £128 million [around $224 million] and staff their Christmas bonuses yesterday, after a trader mistakenly sold 600,000 more shares than he should have. The trader at Mizuho Securities, who has not been named, fell foul of what is known in financial circles as “fat finger syndrome” where a dealer types incorrect details into his computer. He wanted to sell one share in a new telecoms company called J Com, for 600,000 yen (about £3,000) [$5284]. Unfortunately, the order went through as a sale of 600,000 shares at 1 yen each.

That error alone would have been bad enough, but the consequences were much worse because 600,000 shares represents more than 40 times the total number issued by the company, and the vast discrepancy effectively created a technical shortage of shares, worth about £1.6 billion [$13.3 million].

Despite Mizuho’s attempts to rectify the mistake, some estimates put the possible financial damage to the firm at about 60 billion yen [about $499 million] — a figure that may be big enough to destabilise the securities arm of what is one of the four largest financial groups in the world.

The slip caused immediate shockwaves in the Tokyo market as traders tried to guess which firm had made the mistake. Fearing the impact, traders sold shares in all Japanese broking houses and the sell-off led to the value of the Nikkei 225 falling 2 per cent. It was only later that Mizuho admitted that one of its traders had made the error. If Mizuho has to accept the loss, it may have to sell many of its stockholdings to raise the money, creating further pressure on Japanese stocks.

Mizuho said it was discussing with the Tokyo stock exchange how to deal with the matter. There is a chance that Mizuho will persuade the Tokyo exchange, which is under pressure for allowing the obviously mistaken trade to go ahead, to have it cancelled.

As if the hapless trader was not unpopular enough, the firm also cancelled its end-of-year party, scheduled for last night.
Posted by:Pappy

#11  Why Open outcry beats crap out of computers. It's not fast but you don't have people with "fingers" screwing up.
Posted by: Mahou Sensei Negi-bozu   2005-12-09 22:56  

#10  Amputate?

The yakuza are on this already.
Posted by: Zenster   2005-12-09 17:46  

#9  Let your fingers do the walking.
Posted by: Flagum Flitle2120   2005-12-09 17:19  

#8  fat finger syndrome?

Amputate?
Posted by: BigEd   2005-12-09 17:13  

#7  I wonder if he did the Japanese version of:

"Yes! I'm sure dammit! Why does this program have to ask that every time?"

"Oops!"
Posted by: CrazyFool   2005-12-09 14:31  

#6  The trader at Mizuho Securities, who has not been named, fell foul of what is known in financial circles as “fat finger syndrome” where a dealer types incorrect details into his computer.

That'll teach him to post a major trade from his Blackberry after a three Martini lunch.
Posted by: Zenster   2005-12-09 14:16  

#5  I would think after the Barings Bank failure, there would be alarms at every institution, whether or not there were before then.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2005-12-09 14:02  

#4  RJ: Can't happen as described, the very fact that he was trying to sell more shares than existed (The Float) would trigger stop alarms before the transaction could complete.

Something is not being said here, like maybe he disabled the alarms?


Individual trading platforms have these failsafes - institutional ones do not. This guy will need to branch into some other line of work.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2005-12-09 12:48  

#3  I was thinking he'll probably commit hari-kari (spelling?). I just see the trader who committed the mistake killing himself out of shame and humiliation. It seems that Japanese have done so for far less. Does anyone else also think he will kill himself, as I theorize? I cannot believe that they let this go thru. It was a mistake. Why the hell would they let this happen. $500 million! It's ridiculous that the government hasn't stepped in to rectify this. Give the company a break. "UNDO" it.
Posted by: KentuckyBeef   2005-12-09 11:55  

#2  Can't happen as described, the very fact that he was trying to sell more shares than existed (The Float) would trigger stop alarms before the transaction could complete.

Something is not being said here, like maybe he disabled the alarms?
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2005-12-09 08:37  

#1  I keep telling people "spellcheck" is NOT the same as proofreading.

Sounds like the trader should have double-checked his entry before hitting "enter" .... (In the case of the big money traders deal with, triple-check is not a bad idea.)
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-12-09 00:40  

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