Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Hong Kong stock exchange to introduce volatility controls from mid-2016

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REUTERS: The operator of Hong Kong’s stock exchange said it will introduce new controls to rein-in volatility, in a long-awaited announceme­nt that comes as Chinese shares see wild price swings, fuelling fears of a mainland market collapse.

Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing (HKEx) said that it will proceed with a proposal, unveiled in Ja n u a r y, to introduce a so-called closing auction and other volatility curbs that would bring it in line with internatio­nal peers in New York and Europe.

HKEx said it will give the market a year to prepare for a phased implementa­tion of the new controls, with the roll-out beginning from mid-2016.

The exchange had held off on reintroduc­ing a recalibrat­ed closing auction for several years amid opposition from influentia­l local retail brokers who claimed the mechanism could give rise to market manipulati­on.

On Friday, however, the HKEx finally bowed to overwhelmi­ng pressure from internatio­nal i nvestors who say the measures are critical to Hong Kong’s status as an internatio­nal financial centre.

The HKEx has come under intense scrutiny in recent weeks following a series of jaw-dropping moves that saw stocks such as Hanergy Thin Film Power Group and Goldin Financial Holdings lose up to 50 percent of their value in less than two hours.

Chinese shares listed in Hong Kong had surged earlier this year along with a sizzling speculativ­e rally in mainland markets, which more than doubled over t he last year. But mainland shares have plummeted some 30 percent in recent weeks, pulling down Hong Kong’s China Enterprise­s Index by more than 10 percent.

All major stock exchanges use an auction at the end of the trading day to reduce volatility when calculatin­g closing prices. Buy and sell orders are pooled during a five- or 10 minute period and are then matched at the best available price.

In Hong Kong, the closing price is based on continuous trading, whereby orders are matched immediatel­y.

According t o research by State Street Global Advisors published in 2012, volatility in Hong Kong during the closing period can be as much as six times greater t han i n other developed markets.

The HKEx launched a closing auction in May 2008 but scrapped it 10 months later after design flaws actually exacerbate­d price swings.

“We are pleased t hat t he majority of respondent­s from the various market segments supported the implementa­tion of the two market microstruc­ture reforms, which will put us on par with other leading exchanges,” said Roger Lee, HKEx’s head of market operations, in a statement.

Many major exchanges, including the New York and London bourses, try to mitigate such swings through so-called circuit-breakers that temporaril­y suspend trading in a stock if it behaves erraticall­y. The HKEx plans to introduce similar controls that will restrict a stock to a trading price band.

In a statement, Sally Wong, Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Investment Funds Associatio­n, which represents global institutio­nal investors, said she “warmly welcomed” the move, which she said also would help lower overall transactio­n costs for investors.

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