30th Aniv. of the S&P
- Posted by Jeff Carter
- on April 21st, 2012
Today is the 30th birthday of the S&P contract at the CME ($CME). Hard to believe it’s been that long. As a young college kid I used to visit my friend Orv Wilkin (ORV) on the floor. He was a trader at the exchange, and I was thinking about trying to get a job. Unfortunately, I had to actually make money in college and couldn’t afford to make $150 a week as a runner.
I recall the old pit opening up at the old CME building. It’s a health club now. There wasn’t any room to move, and because of the popularity of that contract and the interest rate quadrant there wasn’t any room to put people on the floor. The exchange instituted a hiring freeze. Thank goodness OSHA never visited there.
Five years after the contract started, we had the greatest one day crash in stock market history since 1929. Oct 19, 1987. Of course, the New York bankers blamed portfolio insurance and the futures contract at the CME. They wanted to ban the contract. The bankers wanted to ban it not because it was detrimental to the marketplace, but because it was providing more transparency to the market. The futures contract was tightening spreads in the cash market. Bankers were having to compete harder.
I remember working in the Eurodollars ($GE_F) all day that day. After our close at 2PM, Brian Brophy and I walked over to the edge of the S&P and watched. 8000 points lower on the day. Millions made and lost. The intensity of our day was overwhelming. Eurodollars normally traded in $25/tick increments. That day most of the quotes were in $250/tick increments. The day after the SPUs crashed, we opened up 350 points higher. Somehow we knew what we were witnessing was supremely historic.
After an intense investigation, people concluded that the market would have crashed even more if it were not for the S&P. The independent traders that stayed in the pit absorbed a lot of the selling that would have gone to the cash market. No one could get their orders filled in the chaos on Wall Street, but they found liquidity in Chicago.
Jack Sandner was the exchange chair at the time and is fond of telling a little story about that time. In the days after the crash, there was a lot of finger pointing. Finally, Jack laid down a challenge. He said, “Show me your trade register. Show me your pays and collects. Show me who traded with who and when.” The other exchanges couldn’t. The internalized cash markets couldn’t. Their leaders were silent. CME could.
The contract’s presence in the economic system was secured. Virtually every exchange and country in the world tried to copy it. You can’t go anywhere in the world and not trade futures on a stock index.
In 1997, Bill Shepard(BILL) created the emini futures. The creation of it came out of the CME not winning the negotiation for Dow futures. It became the fastest growing contract in the world. The Dow futures never really took off. At first, it made the pit traded S&P thicker. Eventually, it lead the electronic revolution in futures that laid dormant since GLOBEX inception in 1987.
Flash forward to May of 2010. The flash crash. Ironically, the same fingers pointing. The same tongues were wagging. Supposedly it’s a rogue order in the emini-S&P($ES_F) that touched off the fall. Of course, that’s not true. In the electronic marketplace it’s not the transparency the S&P contract brings that is the problem.
The real problem with today’s markets is the lack of transparency caused by internalization, dark pools, and payment for order flow. These activities allow the strong to prey on the weak or unaware.
Today, when they ring the opening bell at 8:30 CT, many of my old friends that used to be in the pit every day will not be there. The pit is empty, and all the trading is off the floor. In secluded rooms all over the world, the contract is powered by computers running algorithms and quiet clicks. Instead of the way the contract was born. The shouts and hand signals, the tug of a tie to confirm a trade, the intense personal drama of trader rivalry, elbows thrown for pit position. A hip here, a body block there. Giddy laughter. The S&P pit was unlike any other. There was a hazy intensity that always resonated in there. Anything could happen at any moment. If May of 2010 is any guide, it still could.
The information in this blog post represents my own opinions and does not contain a recommendation for any particular security or investment. I or my affiliates may hold positions or other interests in securities mentioned in the Blog, please see my Disclaimer page for my full disclaimer.
-
Jeffrey Carter is an angel investor and independent trader. He specializes in turning concepts into profits. He co-founded Hyde Park Angels one of the most active angel groups in the United States in April of 2007. He previously served on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Board of Directors. He has done market commentary for (More...) -
Archives
Tags Cloud
#eastwooding 3D printing Accounting rules Angel Investing Ann Althouse Asset Bubbles Barry Lind Boston Marathon Capital Appreciation Classroom Currencies DV Economic crisis ETF Eurozone Flight jacket Foreign Exchange Gary Becker Google+ Groupthink HE_F Holidays Houston ICE Italian Army James Altucher Jeju National University Leaving Illinois Leon Panetta LIBOR Monterey Jack NASDAQ Nebraska environment Omaha Nebraska Pliny the Younger Powerball regulations Relative change and difference Siskel Slow Food Stacy Keibler Strategic Leadership Ultraviolet US Constitution ZF_F-
BlogRoll
-
Abnormal Returns
All Tuition
American Thinker
Andy Narayanan
Arnold Waldstein
AVC
Becker Posner Blog
Ben Horowitz Blog
Better Markets
Betting the Business
Black Line Review
BloombergTV
Both Sides of the Table
Brad Feld
Business Insider
Business News Network
Carpe Diem
CBOE
CFTC
Chicago Booth Graduate School of Business
Chicago Boyz
CityWide SuperSlow
CME Group
CNBC
CNNMoney
Cooler By The Lake
Counterpoint
Daily Economic Release Calendar
Doug Ross @ Journal
Economics of a POW Camp
Fama-French Forum
Farmgate
Fault Lines
Foundation for Families
Fox Business
Freakonomics
Garden and Gun
George Stigler Institute
Good Beer Hunting
Hayek Institute
Howard Lindzon
Huffington Post
Hyde Park Angels
ICE
Illinois College of Business
Informed Trades
Instapundit.com
Intrade
James Altucher
John Taylor's Blog
Jump Innovation
Junto Institute
Legal Issues in Angel Funding
Macroblog-Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Marginal Revolution
Microbrews in Chicago
Mike And G
Milton Friedman Institute
NakedTrader
NASDAQ
National World War Two Museum
Nice Deb
Notes From Underground
NYSE
Open Markets
Pajamas Media
Pando Daily
PE Hub
Power Points
Ramanations
Ronald Coase Institute
Seatleaser News
Seatleaser.com
SEC
Senate Banking Committee
Senator Blutarsky
StockTwits
Take A Report
Tallgrass Beef
Techcrunch
The American
The Big Picture
The Clubber Fund
The Cusp
The Daily Crux
The Grumpy Economist
The Jack B Show
The Minimalist Trader
The Musings of The Big Red Car
The Polsky Center
The Streetwise Professor
Tough Love Marketing
Townhall
US Federal Reserve Bank
US House Financial Services Committee
US Treasury
Wire Points
World War Two Blog
-

