mookiemookie |
05-07-10 08:07 AM |
Its easier than you think for one little screwup to balloon into a mess.
Back in 2004 I was working for a money management firm that handled high dollar clients. I had a standing order from the portfolio manager on this particular account to invest $1mm in 7-day commercial paper and to reinvest whenever it matured. So on this particular day, it was time to reinvest. So I get on the Bloomberg terminal and submit (what I thought was) my $1mm order.
Now when you buy commercial paper through the direct issuer order system on Bloomberg, you're dealing directly with the issuer (American Express, Chevron, etc.) and those trades are for all intents and purposes binding and final. The authorization is already set up in advance so you can execute the trades quickly each morning, as the commercial paper market moves quickly. By noon, the trading is pretty much done for the day. So anwyays, when you submit the order, the issuer sends the paper over and our settlement department wires the funds back and your trade is settled. Unlike regular bonds that have a trade date + 3 day settlement, commercial paper trades settle same day.
So about an hour after I sent the trade, I get a call from our settlement department saying that there's a $10mm order coming in and they're not sure what the deal is because I told them to be expecting a $1mm trade. My butt puckered. I immediately thought "Oh sh!t, I was a little happy on the '0' key, wasn't I?"
Luckily, the account had enough to cover the cost of the trade. I sold the extra $9mm back that same day and only had to eat about a $1000 loss, but it was not one of my greatest moments.
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