The Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) trading system failed for more than six hours yesterday, costing
investors heavy losses while raising fresh concerns over the reliability
of the stock market infrastructure.
Monday’s system
outage was the third in a span of six months, following similar
collapses in January this year and October last year.
Market
turnover dropped 57.4 percent to Sh369 million compared to Sh865.3
million recorded on Monday last week, indicating heavy investor losses
from the system glitch.
Trading was extended beyond
normal hours, to 5pm, following restoration of the system at about 3.49
pm having failed to start trading at the usual 9 am.
The
system outage is the latest in a streak of costly failures in recent
years that have left NSE investors counting heavy losses.
The
NSE attributed Monday’s glitch to “technical challenges” occasioned by
the unavailability of connectivity to the Central Depository System
(CDS), which made it impossible to buy or sell shares. “The
aforementioned has affected core services including trading of equities
and bonds,” said the NSE in a statement.
NSE chief
executive Geoffrey Odundo later said extension of trading hours had
helped investors to move Sh369 million worth of shares. “The NSE and
CDSC are in the process of upgrading our respective infrastructures that
will provide more efficient system availability. In the interim we will
ensure challenges leading to such failures are addressed,” said Mr
Odundo.
Central Depository and Settlement Corporation
(CDSC) chief executive Rose Mambo, however, said the problem was
restricted to NSE’s automated trading systems (ATS). “We are waiting for
a technical report from the system providers on what exactly caused the
problem. All CDSC services were working well, but the NSE ATS was
unable to connect to our database,” Ms Mambo said in an interview. The
capital markets regulator said it was monitoring the issue. Capital
Markets Authority (CMA) chief executive Paul Muthaura said the regulator
wants the market players to comply with international standards for
infrastructure providers.
“As the Authority we see the stability of financial markets
infrastructure providers being the NSE, CDSC and the Central Bank’s CSD
as being critical to our visibility and recognition as an attractive
financial centre so the maintenance of the integrity and stability to
those systems are a national priority,” said Mr Muthaura in an
interview.
“The NSE and the CDSC have been working in
the last couple of years on building and upgrading their infrastructure
to come into compliance. Right now we are not operating on the upgraded
systems,” he said.
“They are still in the process of
finalizing, testing and operationalisation of the new system, which is
why we continue to face some of these outages. The core focus is
accelerating the process to complete testing and transitioning the
market to the new infrastructure.”
Following the
January outage, Mr Odundo had said then the bourse would invest an
undisclosed amount of money to upgrade infrastructure and address gaps
in its service recovery capacity by June. The ATS system connects
remotely to stockbroker offices, allowing them to trade from the comfort
of their premises.
The ATS went live in September
2006, replacing the open outcry system that had been in place for
decades since establishment of the bourse in 1954.
The loss of more half a day’s trading is likely to depress the market numbers for this week.
Investor
wealth at the bourse stood at Sh2.36 trillion on Friday, having fallen
by Sh21.2 billion through the week. Stockbrokers in particular lose
whenever there is limited or no trading, given that they derive their
income from commissions charged on trades. Resumption of full-day
trading today is likely to see heightened activity on the back of
pent-up demand. The NSE has in the past blamed some of the hitches on
the fact that its trading system is coupled with the CDSC platform,
meaning that any problem on either affects trading.
A
Sri Lanka-based information technology firm that specialises in selling
electronic trading systems installed NSE’s automated system while
India's Chella Software provides the broker back office system. Mr
Odundo earlier defended the quality of the software provided by the
Colombo headquartered IT firm in the wake of the recurring hitches,
saying it also provides the same trading platforms to larger bourses
including the London Stock Exchange and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
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