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Thursday, 23 April 2015

THE BRITISH TRADER ARRESTED IN CONNECTION WITH THE 'FLASH CRASH' IS ACCUSED OF MAKING $862,000 IN ONE DAY FROM HIS MUM'S SOFA

The May 6, 2010, 20-minute "flash crash" will reverberate
for quite some time.
Navinder Singh Sarao, a 36-year-old British trader, was arrested Tuesday in connection with the "Flash Crash" in 2010. The sudden slump in share prices wiped about 9% off the Dow on May 6, 2010, worth about $1 trillion (£665 billion) in value.

Sarao was reportedly running the operation from his parents' house in Hounslow, west London.

US authorities have for some time thought the crash was the result of market manipulation, but they were unable to peg it to a source until now.

Sarao is accused of placing enormously large sell orders for "E-Minis" (US stock futures) to create the appearance of a large supply to drive the price down. According to a criminal complaint, Sarao would buy at the new, lower price, and then cancel the sell orders. This technique is known as "dynamic layering" or "spoofing."

All of this can be done in fractions of a second using high-frequency trading,

The US Department of Justice says Sarao once made $862,048 (£576,187) in a single day with that method.

SARAO repeated this conduct 24 times on January 28, using the dynamic layering technique for a total of 274.7 minutes. When the dynamic layering technique was active, it placed downward pressure on the market price of E-Minis. SARAO exploited the price movements during this period by executing 10,114 buy trades (totalling 87,736 lots) and 10,301 sell trades (totalling 87,736 lots) with a total notional value of approximately $11.2 billion, and obtained approximately $862,048 in net profits from his E-Mini trades.

A particularly severe version of that method helped cause the 2010 crash, when investors were still pretty jittery after the financial trauma of 2008 and 2009.

According to the US filing, Sarao's emails showed him telling his futures commission merchant that he told US regulators "to kiss my a--" on the very day of the flash crash.

The address where Nav Sarao Futures Limited is registered, in Hounslow, London, on Tuesday.

The Financial Times talked to some of the alleged manipulator's neighbours, and they said there was no sign of the supposedly colossal profits:

"He drives that broken down green car, it belongs to his parents," said a resident from across the road, who lives next door to Mr Sarao's brother. "His mother works part-time in a pharmacy and his father is retired. They're quite tight [for money] I'd say; they're not going on holidays or anything like that."

Sarao's business was primarily done through "Nav Sarao Futures Limited," which is registered to a pretty ordinary residential address in Hounslow. This is reportedly the house of his parents.

In April 2010, he also set up "Nav Sarao Milking Markets Limited," followed by "International Guarantee Corporation" in 2012 — both of which were incorporated in the Caribbean and, US authorities believe, were established for tax-avoidance purposes.

But Bloomberg's Matt Levine is having some trouble believing the whole tale:

Sarao didn't just retire to a supervillain lair after the flash crash. The CFTC lists "at least" 12 days on which he allegedly manipulated the futures market; eight of them came after the flash crash, and he allegedly continued to manipulate the futures market more or less up to the moment he was arrested. The CFTC claims that Sarao basically started his spoofing career by causing the flash crash, and then went ahead and kept spoofing for another five years without much interruption ...

If regulators think that Sarao's behaviour on May 6, 2010, caused the flash crash, and if they think he continued that behaviour for much of the subsequent five years, and if that behaviour was screamingly obvious, maybe they should have stopped him a little earlier?

Business Insider

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