NYSE prepares disaster backup plan: No Human Traders
Sat Mar 9, 2013 1:19pm EST
(Reuters) - The New York Stock Exchange is readying plans
to be able to operate without human traders in case another disaster, such as
Superstorm Sandy, forces the shutdown of its historic trading floor in downtown
Manhattan, The Wall Street Journal reported.
NYSE Euronext (NYX.N) is preparing to submit details of
the plan to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, according to the
report, which cited people involved in the preparations. If activated, the plan
would represent the first time the 221-year-old exchange would rely entirely on
computer systems, without the oversight of floor-based traders, the paper said.
A NYSE spokesman declined to comment on the report.
The disaster plan would shift trading entirely to Arca,
NYSE's all-electronic sister market. It would replace NYSE's current backup
plan that calls for the exchange to remain open in a limited capacity while
sending orders to Arca to be filled.
Exchanges including Direct Edge Holdings LLC and BATS
Global Markets Inc BATS.Z in the past year have moved to develop backup sites
in Chicago, the paper said. Nasdaq OMX Group Inc (NDAQ.O) maintains a disaster
recovery site in Ashburn, Virginia, and can run its U.S. markets from its
European base in Stockholm.
Superstorm Sandy forced the first weather-related
multi-day shutdown of the U.S. stock market in more than 120 years when it
struck the East Coast in October.
(Reporting By Susan Kelly in Chicago; editing by Gunna
Dickson)
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