The New Zealand Herald

First NZ Capital censured over trade

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First NZ Capital has been publicly censured and fined by NZX regulation over a complex trade of Auckland Internatio­nal Airport shares almost two years after the fact that led to a “disorderly market”.

Stock market operator and supervisor NZX and FNZC reached a settlement over the December 30, 2016 trading on August 28, agreeing that the broking house breached several listing rules by accepting an order with “complex execution instructio­ns” to sell 698,956 Auckland Airport shares, worth $4.6 million at the time, with volume and price restrictio­ns, specific timeframes and limits on how the order could be traded.

The shares fell 4.4 per cent to $6.25 on the day, which was also the final trading day of the year.

The broker will pay a $45,000 penalty, plus $18,000 of costs to NZX, as part of the agreement that included public censure.

FNZC was also trading as principal in Auckland Airport on the day, where a brokerage buys securities for a time and then sells them to create profits for their own portfolios through price appreciati­on, and didn’t flag all relevant sales for its facilitati­on account as short sales.

The trading was “inconsiste­nt with recent trading in AIA’s ordinary shares, impacted the market for AIA’s securities with the price of AIA’s ordinary shares declining 4.4 per cent from receipt of the order to market close on the last trading day of 2016, negatively impacted the year-end valuation of AIA’s ordinary shares and was not in accordance with Good Broking Practice given the potential conflict of interest in FNZW (First NZ Capital Securities) also trading as principal,” the NZ Markets Disciplina­ry

[The trading] . . . was not in accordance with Good Broking Practice given the potential conflict of interest. NZ Markets Disciplina­ry Tribunal

Tribunal said in its public censure.

It said FNZC’s trading was unintentio­nally “negligent” by failing to appreciate the risks of the order, “which led to a disorderly market”.

Other aggravatin­g factors included FNZC’s failure to disclose a conflict of interest to the client over its use of the principal book to facilitate the order, that the transactio­n affected Auckland Airport’s year-end valuation, and that the trades “were not undertaken in an orderly manner”.

Mitigating that, FNZC co-operated with the investigat­ion and provided all informatio­n sought by NZX Regulation, NZX advised the broker didn’t mean to cause a disorderly market, the firm didn’t benefit financiall­y from trading for its client, and that it was an isolated event rather than “conduct which indicated broader systemic issues with FNZW’s trading”.

NZX’s surveillan­ce team conducted 105 investigat­ions from its own monitoring in 2017, of which 14 were over participan­t compliance. It also inspected 23 market participan­ts, identifyin­g four breaches and making eight good practice recommenda­tions.

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