NEW YORK (Reuters) - A plunge in U.S. markets on Monday triggered a 15-minute trading halt in stocks after the S&P 500 fell 7% shortly after the market opened.
The declines came as tumbling oil prices coalesced with concerns over economic damage from the spreading coronavirus to spur bouts of selling in a wide range of assets.
Here is how the markets work during disruptions or panic selling of stocks.
HOW DO TRADING HALTS WORK?
The current guidelines mandate a 15-minute pause in trading on all U.S. stock exchanges if the S&P 500 index falls more than 7% before 3:25 p.m. New York time.
Another “circuit-breaker” kicks in if the decline hits 13% before 3:25 p.m., and trading is suspended for the session if the drop reaches 20%.
Trading also halts on both the Dow and the Nasdaq when a circuit-breaker is triggered on the S&P 500.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission mandated the creation of market-wide circuit-breakers to prevent a repeat of the Oct. 19, 1987 market crash, in which the Dow plunged 22.6%.
CAN THE ENTIRE MARKET BE SHUT DOWN?
On Oct. 29 and 30, 2012, markets were closed after Superstorm Sandy, the worst storm to hit New York City in nearly 75 years. The NYSE closed its trading floor due to unsafe conditions in lower Manhattan.
The exchange had planned to go fully electronic, but with much of Wall Street unprepared for the transition and running on skeleton staffing, traders and regulators felt uncomfortable with the idea and it was shelved. There has been extensive testing since then.
The markets were also closed following the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks until Sept. 17 to avoid panic selling.
HOW PREPARED ARE STOCK EXCHANGES?
U.S. stock exchanges say they have contingency plans.
Nearly all U.S. stock trading is done electronically, with only Intercontinental Exchange Inc's ICE.N NYSE still operating an open outcry trading floor. But even the Big Board can operate fully electronically if the floor needs to be shut.
The exchanges said they are monitoring the situation.
WHAT IF AN EXCHANGE GOES DOWN?
On July 8, 2015, a technical glitch forced the NYSE to suspend trading for several hours. But trading continued as normal on the other 10 U.S. stock exchanges operating at the time.
There are now 13 stock exchanges and another three expected to launch this year, as well as around 30 private stock trading venues run by broker dealers, where trading can take place.
In August 2013, a technical problem froze trading in all Nasdaq-listed stocks for three hours, leading the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to call for a meeting of Wall Street executives to insure “continuous and orderly” functioning of the markets.
HOW HAVE THINGS CHANGED SINCE PAST ISSUES?
Technology has made it easier for people to work from home, said Doug Clark, a Toronto-based electronic trading executive who has worked for Virtu Financial, ITG, and BMO Capital Markets. Toronto was one of the first places to experience an outbreak of the SARS virus after it spread from China in 2003.
“We were all scrambling,” he said. Traders had difficulty accessing all of their trading tools from home, he said, as did exchange executives.
VPN technology has improved greatly since then and working from home is not such a big issue anymore, Clark said.
The SEC also introduced a rule called Regulation Systems Compliance and Integrity in 2014 to hold exchanges to a higher level of emergency preparedness, and the bourses do regular testing of their backup facilities, said James Angel, a Georgetown University finance professor.
But testing has its limits.
“You can do all the testing you want, but you never know if it’s really going to work until you run it for real,” Angel said.
Reporting by John McCrank; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Dan Grebler
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