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Rules made Knight mistake costly this time

Regulations put in place to protect investors after $862 billion of market value was briefly erased on May 6, 2010, were the same rules that almost ruined Knight Capital this month.

Published: Aug. 15, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDT
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Regulations put in place to protect investors after $862 billion of market value was briefly erased on May 6, 2010, were the same rules that almost ruined Knight Capital this month.

Knight, whose market-making unit executes 10 percent of U.S. equity volume, lost $440 million on Aug. 1, and its stock has plunged 73 percent after a computer malfunction bombarded the market with errant orders that exchanges declined to cancel. A decade ago, the firm suffered almost no consequences in a breakdown when officials agreed to void trades.

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