What are the conditions under which an option trade could be busted? Please provide links to sources of information, such as exchange. If a stock trade has had busted trades, could the option series trades also get busted?
Quote from tradingjournals:
What are the conditions under which an option trade could be busted? Please provide links to sources of information, such as exchange. If a stock trade has had busted trades, could the option series trades also get busted?
Quote from tradingjournals:
What are the conditions under which an option trade could be busted? Please provide links to sources of information, such as exchange. If a stock trade has had busted trades, could the option series trades also get busted?
Quote from Sushi4you:
happens to me all the time at Lightspeed - they love to srew up on you
Quote from dragonman:
Does it happen regarding specific product (such as index options, specific equity options, etc.) or does it happen regarding different types of options? Also, do they bust your trade ("nullify" the trade so that you return to the situation you were before the trade) or do they just adjust the trade to reflect a certain price? What is the time period after which they bust or adjust your trades?
It's very strange if it happens to you all the time, "bust" and "adjustments" should be relatively rare.
Quote from rmorse:
They are rare per person, but not rare per day. Many times they occur on the opening when a market maker sends out a bad quote.
Quote from dragonman:
and in such cases does the exchanges usually just adjust a trade to reflect the correct price or actually nullify (or "bust") the whole trade? it seems reasonable to me that "bust" a trade will be very rare as compared to adjustment of a trade, since it could have worse consequences than just an adjustment of a trade. For example, if somone sold to close its option position, and with the proceeds received he immediately bought another option position, then if the trader is notified that the former trade was bust the trader can find itself short of money regarding his new trade, isn't it (and in adjustment he will just have to add the adjustment amount)?
also, what are the timeframes during which a trade can be bust or adjusted?
Quote from rmorse:
You'll have to read the rule. http://www.nyse.com/pdfs/Rule 975NY Obvious Error Rule..pdf
Sometimes you can't adjust. What if you're bidding 1.00 for a put trading at 10.00. On the open, the best bid on a market sell order was your bid. The second after the sale, the market goes from 1.00 - 15.00 to 9.75-10.00. The seller might claim the change violates the rule and the seller is entitled to 9.75. You're 1.00 bid. They can't make you bid higher. Your trade would be bustedand your order would be reestablished.