It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: FlexAuthority
a reply to: UnBreakable
Thought this was very suspicious and worrisome
You worry too much.
originally posted by: UnBreakable
Sorry if this has been posted already, searched but found nothing. CNN reports NYSE gives out list of "trouble companies" before yesterdays trading - then pulls story Thought this was very suspicious and worrisome. Wonder if this had anything to do with "glitch" and yesterdays halt in trading? Isn't the exchange supposed to be impartial as alluded to in the video?
Video not working, here's URL:
www.youtube.com...
originally posted by: CharlieSpeirs
originally posted by: UnBreakable
Sorry if this has been posted already, searched but found nothing. CNN reports NYSE gives out list of "trouble companies" before yesterdays trading - then pulls story Thought this was very suspicious and worrisome. Wonder if this had anything to do with "glitch" and yesterdays halt in trading? Isn't the exchange supposed to be impartial as alluded to in the video?
Video not working, here's URL:
www.youtube.com...
Just take out the "v=" in your link.
Last year, Thomson Reuters estimated the market value of Chinese companies listed on just the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market at more than $1.4 trillion. With the Chinese stock market rupturing over the past week and trading in more than a thousand stocks suspended in China, the spillover has hit the U.S. market hard.
According to PricewaterhouseCoopers’ March 31, 2015 list of the largest 100 global companies by market cap, there are 11 Chinese companies in that group. We took a look at trading in just two of those names yesterday, China Mobile and China Life Insurance, both of which trade as ADRs on the New York Stock Exchange.
After volume spikes in the morning prior to the trading halt by the Exchange, volume was subdued during the hours the Exchange remained closed. (Other trading venues are supposed to pick up the slack when an exchange goes dark.) Then volume picked up again when the Exchange reopened.
China Mobile (symbol CHL) closed down 5.38 percent yesterday while China Life Insurance (symbol LTR) dropped 6.65 percent in New York trading. If Wall Street firms were afraid of roiling Chinese stocks further with huge volume and panic selling in the U.S., the subdued volume during the three hour and forty minute halt at the NYSE came in handy.
originally posted by: Maluhia
She may very well have heard it from brokers on the floor - they DO know what's going on. She blabbed before she could be censored. Then her bosses towed the party line to prevent panic.
The NYSE has more contingency plans and back up systems than Obama has golf games....the excuses yesterday were exactly that!
Last year, Thomson Reuters estimated the market value of Chinese companies listed on just the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market at more than $1.4 trillion. With the Chinese stock market rupturing over the past week and trading in more than a thousand stocks suspended in China, the spillover has hit the U.S. market hard.
According to PricewaterhouseCoopers’ March 31, 2015 list of the largest 100 global companies by market cap, there are 11 Chinese companies in that group. We took a look at trading in just two of those names yesterday, China Mobile and China Life Insurance, both of which trade as ADRs on the New York Stock Exchange.
After volume spikes in the morning prior to the trading halt by the Exchange, volume was subdued during the hours the Exchange remained closed. (Other trading venues are supposed to pick up the slack when an exchange goes dark.) Then volume picked up again when the Exchange reopened.
China Mobile (symbol CHL) closed down 5.38 percent yesterday while China Life Insurance (symbol LTR) dropped 6.65 percent in New York trading. If Wall Street firms were afraid of roiling Chinese stocks further with huge volume and panic selling in the U.S., the subdued volume during the three hour and forty minute halt at the NYSE came in handy.