The U.S. Justice
Department is investigating high-speed trading for possible insider
trading, Attorney General Eric Holder told lawmakers on Friday. The disclosure comes
the same week that regulators and the FBI also confirmed they are
looking into potential wrongdoing by high-frequency stock traders. Regulators
have been examining whether ordinary investors are at an unfair
disadvantage to high-speed traders, who use computer algorithms to
rapidly dart in and out of trades to earn fractions of a penny that add
up to big profits over time. "I
can confirm that we at the Justice Department are investigating this
practice to determine whether it violates insider trading laws," Holder
told a House panel at a hearing on the Justice Department's budget. Earlier
this week the heads of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and
the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission also confirmed those
agencies have several active probes into market integrity and structure
issues, including high-speed and automated trading. On
Monday, the FBI confirmed it has been conducting a wide-ranging
investigation of high-speed trading for months, an outgrowth from the
years-long crackdown on insider-trading. The bureau is examining whether high-frequency traders are front-running others' trades by getting to exchanges first. A big trade, such as a bank shorting a million shares of a company under investigation, could be considered a material event. Reuters
also reported earlier this week that the FBI is looking at areas such
as whether high-speed firms can cut the line in terms of how security
orders are placed or are engaged in "spoofing" trades that are not
really trades to give the illusion of market activity. Acting
CFTC chairman Mark Wetjen said on Thursday his agency is also
investigating whether spoofing runs afoul of the derivatives regulator's
rules. The long-running
debate about high-frequency trading intensified on Monday, after
best-selling author Michael Lewis published a new book, "Flash Boys: A
Wall Street Revolt." The
book contends that high-speed traders have rigged the stock market,
profiting from trades made at a speed unavailable to ordinary investors. Proponents
of high-speed trading have criticized the book, saying high-speed
traders actually benefit other investors by providing liquidity to the
market.
U.S. probing high-speed trading, attorney general says
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Reuters
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