By Bloomberg News - Aug 16, 2013 5:44 AM MT
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-08-16/china-shanghai-composite-surges-as-exchange-said-to-investigate.html
China’s stocks were roiled by a trading error at Everbright Securities Co. (601788) that spurred a 53 percent surge in volumes and sent the Shanghai Composite Index to its biggest intraday gain since March 2009.
The Shanghai gauge jumped from a loss of as much as 1 percent to a gain of 5.6 percent in two minutes during the morning session as 16 of the measure’s 20 biggest companies byweightingrose by the 10 percent daily limit. The index fell 0.6 percent at the close. Everbright’s trades were the main reason for the jump, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said in a statement. The exchange said trades will be settled as normal.
The biggest swings since the global financial crisis threaten to further erode confidence in what’s already the world’s second-worst performing stock market after Greece during the past four years. About 15.3 billion shares of Shanghai Composite (SHCOMP) companies changed hands, versus the 30-day average of 10 billion, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
“I haven’t seen things like this for ages,”Chen Shide, a Guangzhou-based money manager at GF Fund Management Co., which oversees about $16.7 billion, said by phone today. “The market sentiment will continue to remain weak.”
The Shanghai Composite has dropped 8.8 percent this year, versus a 9.9 percent gain in the MSCI All-Country World Index. The Chinese gauge has tumbled about 32 percent during the past four years as growth in the world’s second-largest economy slowed. That’s the second-biggest decline among equity gauges in 45 emerging and developed countries, after the 59 percent slide in Greece’s ASE Index.
‘Poor Sentiment’
Chinese stock accounts containing funds have dropped by more than 2 million from their high in June 2011 to 54.4 million, according to regulatory data compiled by Bloomberg.
“Such a movement won’t help to boost market confidence,” said Li Jun, a strategist at Central China Securities Co. in Shanghai. “Most investors would view such a sudden spike in a market with very poor sentiment as irrational and illogical.”
The government restricts access to mainland markets through its Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program, which has granted international firms a combined quota of $44.9 billion as of July 30. That compares with the $3.1 trillion market value of locally-listed companies.
Today’s surge in stocks was caused by “sizable” buy orders from Everbright’s proprietary accounts, according to the CSRC. The Shanghai Stock Exchange said operation of its trading system was normal today, according to a statement on its official microblog.
PetroChina, ICBC
Everbright Securities, the nation’s ninth-largest brokerage by assets, disclosed the trading error in a statement filed to the Shanghai exchange. Board Secretary Mei Jian didn’t return a call and text message seeking comment.
The company’s shares were suspended in Shanghai trading. China Everbright Ltd. (165), which owns a stake in Everbright Securities, declined 5.5 percent in Hong Kong.
PetroChina Co. (601857) and Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., the nation’s two biggest companies by market value, jumped as much as 10 percent in Shanghai before paring gains to trade little changed by the close. Volume in PetroChina was 239 percent above the three-month average and it was 269 percent greater than the average for ICBC, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“I was terrified, didn’t know what happened,” Wellian Wiranto, an investment strategist at the wealth-management unit of Barclays Plc, which oversees about $217 billion worldwide, said from Singapore today.
Disruptions in electronic markets have been under scrutiny since the May 2010 flash crash, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell almost 1,000 points in minutes before rebounding. Osaka’s derivatives platform malfunctioned in March, while orders for Indian stocks improperly entered by a Mumbai brokerage in October sent the CNX Nifty Index (NIFTY) down 16 percent in eight seconds before it rebounded.
Knight Capital Group Inc. lost more than $450 million after sending erroneous orders to U.S. exchanges on Aug. 1, 2012, because of a computer malfunction.
To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Zhang Shidong in Shanghai atszhang5@bloomberg.net; Weiyi Lim in Singapore at wlim26@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Patterson atmpatterson10@bloomberg.net


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