Post by jonnygemini on Dec 9, 2005 16:54:21 GMT -5
Mizuho Says Trader Error to Cost It at Least $224 Mln (Update5)
Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Mizuho Financial Group Inc., Japan's second-biggest bank, said a typing error at its brokerage arm that triggered $3.5 billion of trades will cost the company at least 27 billion yen ($225 million).
The losses may mount as Mizuho Securities Co. tries to buy stock in J-Com Co. to meet commitments after it mistakenly tried to sell 610,000 shares in the $93 million telecommunications company. The Tokyo Stock Exchange failed to cancel the trade after four requests from Mizuho, the brokerage's President Makoto Fukuda said at a Tokyo press conference today.
The initial loss is equivalent to 4 percent of the bank's forecast profit for the year ending March. The failure by Mizuho and the Tokyo Stock Exchange to limit the losses raised concern among investors that compliance and risk-control measures in the country are insufficient.
``It's the exchange's job to protect all market participants, on the sell side as well as the buyers,'' said Yoji Takeda, who oversees $300 million, including Japanese bank shares, as head of Asian equities at RBC Investment Management (Asia) Ltd. in Hong Kong. ``As for Mizuho, it's got to set up risk-management measures in case something bigger happens in the future.''
The Tokyo Stock Exchange, which failed to open on time after a computer system breakdown last month, didn't suspend trading in J-Com until today.
Errors
``The exchange should have at least halted trades on J-Com yesterday when officials noticed there was an incomprehensible order,'' said Takao Saga, a senior economist at Japan Securities Research Institute. ``Then, it could have checked what was going on, and canceled the order. Instead, the TSE let J-Com trade all day long and a huge number of J-Com shares exchanged hands.''
At 9:27 a.m. yesterday, Mizuho's brokerage wrongly put an order to sell the 610,000 shares for 1 yen each, Fukuda said. It had intended to sell 1 share for 610,000 yen for a client. No trades were carried out at 1 yen because of exchange rules that limit share moves to 15 percent a day.
The brokerage realized its mistake at 9:29 a.m. Mizuho then decided to buy back the shares, Fukuda said.
``Someone unintentionally ignored the alerts,'' Fukuda, 59, said at the press conference. ``We do some training, but nothing that equipped us to handle a crisis of this magnitude. We deeply apologize to investors, the issuer and other people for having caused such a huge problem.''
Marred Debut
Shares of J-Com, which were making their debut on the exchange, fell by the limit to 572,000 yen at 9:30 a.m. By 9:38 a.m., 607,957 shares had been traded and that rose to 708,124 by the 3 p.m. market close, Bloomberg data shows.
The Osaka-based company sold 2,800 shares in its initial public share offering and has just 14,500 shares outstanding, according to Bloomberg data.
There were 421 billion yen of transactions in J-Com shares, making the stock the most actively traded by value on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Shares of Mizuho Financial rose 2 percent to 908,000 yen today, after yesterday dropping 3.4 percent as investors looked beyond the fallout from the share trading losses to improved prospects for Japanese economic growth.
The Topix index tracking bank stocks has surged 60 percent in the second half of this year on expectations the nation's economy is recovering from seven years of deflation that followed the bursting of the ``bubble economy'' of the 1980s.
``It's a hiccup, a one-day foul-up,'' said Geoff Lewis, Hong Kong-based head of investment services at JF Asset Management Ltd., which holds about $570 billion of assets worldwide. ``People have short memories and it's not something that concerns me.''
Dentsu
Mizuho's error echoes a similar mistake on Nov. 30, 2001, when UBS AG sold 610,000 shares in Dentsu Inc. for 16 yen apiece on the company's debut. UBS had helped sell the shares at 420,000 yen in the IPO.
``We can't deny accusations that we didn't have adequate measures in place to handle such a crisis,'' Keisuke Yokoo, deputy president at Mizuho Securities said at today's press conference.
J-Com stock closed yesterday at 772,000 yen, up by the maximum permitted 15 percent. The IPO price was 610,000 yen a share.
``We were upset to witness the violent fluctuations created by Mizuho's wrong order,'' J-Com President Yasuhiko Okamoto said today in a statement.
Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Mizuho Financial Group Inc., Japan's second-biggest bank, said a typing error at its brokerage arm that triggered $3.5 billion of trades will cost the company at least 27 billion yen ($225 million).
The losses may mount as Mizuho Securities Co. tries to buy stock in J-Com Co. to meet commitments after it mistakenly tried to sell 610,000 shares in the $93 million telecommunications company. The Tokyo Stock Exchange failed to cancel the trade after four requests from Mizuho, the brokerage's President Makoto Fukuda said at a Tokyo press conference today.
The initial loss is equivalent to 4 percent of the bank's forecast profit for the year ending March. The failure by Mizuho and the Tokyo Stock Exchange to limit the losses raised concern among investors that compliance and risk-control measures in the country are insufficient.
``It's the exchange's job to protect all market participants, on the sell side as well as the buyers,'' said Yoji Takeda, who oversees $300 million, including Japanese bank shares, as head of Asian equities at RBC Investment Management (Asia) Ltd. in Hong Kong. ``As for Mizuho, it's got to set up risk-management measures in case something bigger happens in the future.''
The Tokyo Stock Exchange, which failed to open on time after a computer system breakdown last month, didn't suspend trading in J-Com until today.
Errors
``The exchange should have at least halted trades on J-Com yesterday when officials noticed there was an incomprehensible order,'' said Takao Saga, a senior economist at Japan Securities Research Institute. ``Then, it could have checked what was going on, and canceled the order. Instead, the TSE let J-Com trade all day long and a huge number of J-Com shares exchanged hands.''
At 9:27 a.m. yesterday, Mizuho's brokerage wrongly put an order to sell the 610,000 shares for 1 yen each, Fukuda said. It had intended to sell 1 share for 610,000 yen for a client. No trades were carried out at 1 yen because of exchange rules that limit share moves to 15 percent a day.
The brokerage realized its mistake at 9:29 a.m. Mizuho then decided to buy back the shares, Fukuda said.
``Someone unintentionally ignored the alerts,'' Fukuda, 59, said at the press conference. ``We do some training, but nothing that equipped us to handle a crisis of this magnitude. We deeply apologize to investors, the issuer and other people for having caused such a huge problem.''
Marred Debut
Shares of J-Com, which were making their debut on the exchange, fell by the limit to 572,000 yen at 9:30 a.m. By 9:38 a.m., 607,957 shares had been traded and that rose to 708,124 by the 3 p.m. market close, Bloomberg data shows.
The Osaka-based company sold 2,800 shares in its initial public share offering and has just 14,500 shares outstanding, according to Bloomberg data.
There were 421 billion yen of transactions in J-Com shares, making the stock the most actively traded by value on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Shares of Mizuho Financial rose 2 percent to 908,000 yen today, after yesterday dropping 3.4 percent as investors looked beyond the fallout from the share trading losses to improved prospects for Japanese economic growth.
The Topix index tracking bank stocks has surged 60 percent in the second half of this year on expectations the nation's economy is recovering from seven years of deflation that followed the bursting of the ``bubble economy'' of the 1980s.
``It's a hiccup, a one-day foul-up,'' said Geoff Lewis, Hong Kong-based head of investment services at JF Asset Management Ltd., which holds about $570 billion of assets worldwide. ``People have short memories and it's not something that concerns me.''
Dentsu
Mizuho's error echoes a similar mistake on Nov. 30, 2001, when UBS AG sold 610,000 shares in Dentsu Inc. for 16 yen apiece on the company's debut. UBS had helped sell the shares at 420,000 yen in the IPO.
``We can't deny accusations that we didn't have adequate measures in place to handle such a crisis,'' Keisuke Yokoo, deputy president at Mizuho Securities said at today's press conference.
J-Com stock closed yesterday at 772,000 yen, up by the maximum permitted 15 percent. The IPO price was 610,000 yen a share.
``We were upset to witness the violent fluctuations created by Mizuho's wrong order,'' J-Com President Yasuhiko Okamoto said today in a statement.