Here Is Today's 482 Millisecond NFP Leak, The Subsequent Gold Slam And Trading Halts

 

On Monday we brought to you proof of a 15 millisecond frontrunning of the Mfg ISM number by what turned out to be HFT clients of Reuters which admitted subsequently it had "inadvertently" leaked the number to select clients. However, that was child's play compared to the absolute market farce that happened today which we can visualize courtesy of Nanex, and which impacted gold, ES, and Treasury Futures altogether.

In sequential order: 62 milliseconds before the NFP number a massive dump of gold took place in what can merely be described as yet another of the infamous gold take downs we know so well which however take place just around the time of the London fixing. That it happened right before the NFP number is either an indication of an early NFP data leak reaching "some" HFT traders, or merely an attempt to set the "mood" for further selling by someone who decided that the NFP print would be negative for gold no matter what it was...

However, manipulated gold markets are nothing new, and frankly we would have been surprised if they did not happen.

What was more amusing was the action after the NFP release in both the eMini and the T-Bond futures, all of which had to be halted for a whopping 5 seconds until the algos, selling everything at first, got the memo out that good news today was in fact good news, and promptly ramped risk to the moon. Either that, or someone called in a code Red, made it so all selling was literally prohibited, and with the only path of no resistance up, resulted in today's epic melt up on what was initially a very bearish kneejerk response to the NFP print.

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It was 15 milliseconds the other day. These 482 milliseconds must be because the fixed the "error" now :):)

 
eurofreek:
It was 15 milliseconds the other day. These 482 milliseconds must be because the fixed the "error" now :):)

Or milliseconds are on discount now that it is made public that they exist

 
techmac:
Or milliseconds are on discount now that it is made public that they exist

You mean when Reuters admitted the "error" it was actually an advertisement?

That is a good one

Reason: