To all of the readers who never placed a 1000 lot order in Mini S&P´s AND actually executed such an order size:
do it yourself (if you have the margin account size I have ;=) and see what happens. Actually, spoofing is the easiest manipulation method around because there are other WANNABE algos out there who engage in HFT or scalping or arbitrage (I don´t give a fa.t how you call it) trying to outsmart the big players and make some ticks here and there.
You should read the charges carefully:
"His offers composed 20% to 29% of the CME’s entire E-mini sell-side order book, the U.S. alleges."
If that´s true, then this MOFO deserves to be in prison for lifetime. Full Stop.
From a guy who actually trades in 1000 lot sizes - and not just "babbling" about it.
yeah, that's probably what the trader they interviewed meant. 60% of the book. Thanks for pointing that out. At anyrate, all I can figure is his algorithm entered a lot of sell stops and cancelled them before they got hit?I don't think this is accurate at all. There's no way an independent was 60% of the market. I think what you or they meant is that they were 60% of the implied *book* at the time. I'm sure if some big fish came along and filled this guy he'd be puking the position immediately.
The thing I like about this is it validates everyone's suspicions about how spoofing orders work and their intent behind it. We've all been collectively observing and dealing with spoofers for a while now so it's good to see someone get punked for it (even if it didn't actually cause the flash crash).
He may be joining Rajat sooner than he thinks....
Supreme Count Declines To Hear Gupta Appeal
Apr 20 2015 | 10:54am ET
The U.S. Supreme Court will not hear former Goldman Sachs director Rajat Gupta’s appeal of his 2012 insider-trading conviction.
There was no comment from the court in the decision. Gupta’s appeal alleged the trial court had failed to admit evidence of his good character and a lack of motive to commit the offense.
Gupta was convicted of three counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy to pass inside information. Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam is serving an 11-year sentence for his role in the scandal.
In 2014, a federal appeals court upheld Gupta’s conviction. His petition to the Supreme Court was his last option to have his case reviewed.