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  2. Fat-finger error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat-finger_error

    At the NYSE, BATS, CBOT, NASDAQ, OMX and American Stock Exchange requests for review must be received "within thirty (30) minutes of execution time". [ 5 ] [ 6 ] At the NYSE-Euronext Liffe (Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam), "Where a member has executed an Erroneous trade, he will have a maximum of 30 minutes from the time of execution within which ...

  3. Flash crash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_crash

    A $4.1 billion trade on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) resulted in a loss to the Dow Jones Industrial Average of over 1,000 points and then a rise to approximately previous value, all over about fifteen minutes. The mechanism causing the event has been heavily researched and is in dispute.

  4. 2018 Samsung fat-finger error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Samsung_fat-finger_error

    This pension fund has 136 trillion won or US$127 billion invested in the Korean stock market. [5] By May 7, 2018, Samsung Securities stated that it would file criminal lawsuits against employees who sold their shares during the fat finger incident. [3] On May 28, 2018, government prosecutors raided the Samsung offices. [10] [needs update]

  5. Samsung Plans Massive $7.2B Stock Buyback: Details - AOL

    www.aol.com/samsung-plans-massive-7-2b-151822502...

    Samsung Electronics (OTC:SSNLF) announces plans to repurchase shares worth 10 trillion won (~$7.17B) as part of its strategy to boost shareholder value. The Board of Directors approved the buyback ...

  6. Samsung flags 10-fold rise in first-quarter profit as chip ...

    www.aol.com/news/samsung-flags-931-rise-first...

    SEOUL (Reuters) -Samsung Electronics estimated on Friday its first-quarter operating profit would rise more than 10-fold, topping market expectations, as chip prices have started to rebound from a ...

  7. Flash trading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_trading

    Flash trading, otherwise known as a flash order, is a marketable order sent to a market center that is not quoting the industry's best price or that cannot fill that order in its entirety. The order is then flashed to recipients of the venue's proprietary data feed to see if any of those firms wants to take the other side of the order.

  8. Is the stock market flashing a net bullish sign? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/stock-market-flashing-net...

    Yesterday, the yield curve - as measured by the difference between the 10 year Treasury and 2 year Treasury yields - inverted, suggesting that the Fed is going to raise interest rates as growth ...

  9. Trading curb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trading_curb

    On the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), one type of trading curb is referred to as a "circuit breaker". These limits were put in place beginning in January 1988 (weeks after Black Monday occurred in 1987) in order to reduce market volatility and massive panic sell-offs, giving traders time to reconsider their transactions.