RT.com, May
15, 2014
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| Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (AFP Photo/ Stan Honda) |
Researchers
in Singapore say millions of dollars in profit was generated illegally by
traders in the United States who took advantage of privileged Federal Reserve
policy decisions disclosed to them before becoming publicly available.
According
to that study, “robust evidence” exists suggesting that traders who knew in
advance about Fed rate announcements traded during an embargo period,
unlawfully benefiting by cutting those deals at the most opportune moment
possible and in turn pocketing upwards of $256 million during a 16-year span.
Price
movements between September 1997 and June 2013 noted by the researchers were
“statistically significant and in the direction of the subsequent policy
surprise,” Gennaro Bernile, Jianfeng Hu and Yuehua Tang wrote in their paper
published out of Singapore Management University and first reported on Tuesday
this week by BusinessWeek journalist Peter Coy.
Those
buying and selling orders, Coy wrote, occurred mere minutes before Fed
announcements were made official, but after members of the media were provided
with details.
In October
2013, the Fed changed the rules applying to that media blackout “to better
protect the information against premature release,” central bank spokesman Joe
Pavel told the Los Angeles Times. Prior to then, journalists were given details
about Fed announcements 10 minutes in advance and were expected to respect an
embargo that prohibited them from breaking the news until cleared.
Since
October, however, journalists have been provided those details 20 minutes early
— on condition that they stay in a lockup room where cell phones aren’t allowed
and internet access is blocked off.
“We review
our processes and controls on an ongoing basis and make adjustments as
necessary to address any issues,” Pavel told the Times.
According
to the SMU researchers, however, the Fed’s late-2013 decision may have come too
little too late.
"Consistent
with information leakage, we find robust evidence of informed trading during
lockup periods ahead of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) monetary
policy announcements," they claim in the study, entitled "Can
information be locked up? Informed trading before macro-news
announcements."
“Back-of-the-envelope
calculations indicate that the aggregate dollar profits … range between $14
[million] and $256 million across the four markets that we examine,” the report
reads. The four markets include the E-mini S&P 500 futures contract, E-mini
Nasdaq 100 futures, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF and the PowerShares QQQ ETF
tracking the Nasdaq 100 index, CNBC reported.
"Our
analysis informs the ongoing policy debate surrounding lockup practices by
testing whether macro-news lockups are associated with informed trading,
consistent with information leakage," the researchers wrote. "Our
results raise serious questions about the appropriateness of FOMC policy
announcements' embargoes, either because information may directly leak from the
news media with pre-release access or from other FOMC insiders with incentives
to mimic such behavior."

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