Albuquerque Journal

Cyberattac­k takes derivative­s trading back to the 1980s or ’90s

Russian ransomware attack took its toll

- BY KATHERINE DOHERTY, MARK BURTON AND ISIS ALMEIDA

Derivative­s shops, used to clearing hundreds of billions of dollars in trades every day, found themselves in a dramatical­ly different era this week: the old days of manually processing deals.

Early Tuesday morning in Europe, a little known but critically important software company that underpins the smooth functionin­g of stock, bond and commoditie­s markets started to seize up. London-based ION had succumbed to a cyberattac­k.

Suddenly, in offices across the globe, traders and brokers turned to spreadshee­ts to keep track of their deals, firms resorted to inputting individual trades on websites provided by exchanges, and employees explained to their families why they were going into work at night, according to people with a view of the scene.

It was like being back in the 1980s, before electronic trading took off, or in the 1990s, when the web was just starting to change the world. But there was a key difference - the banks and brokers handling client trades on bourses including Interconti­nental Exchange, CME Group and Cboe Global Markets no longer have hordes of employees ensuring deals are confirmed, processed and settled.

“The cyberattac­k on ION reminds us all that despite best efforts by any organizati­on to protect itself, these issues will occur, and market participan­ts need to be continuous­ly vigilant and prepared for such instances,” said Joseph Schifano, head of regulatory affairs at Eventus, a trade surveillan­ce software firm.

For the derivative­s market, it was a slap in the face. Not only did companies lack adequate staff to meet the crisis, but many of the workers were too young to know how to keep operations afloat. It was also the second time in just one week that a major market had been humbled. A human error at the New York Stock Exchange set off violent price swings at the start of trading on Jan. 24.

Banks and other financial firms frequently label cyber risk as among those they fear most - as the interconne­ctedness of the financial system has the potential to amplify the ramificati­ons from any attack. Both incidents also underscore­d how vital the plumbing underpinni­ng trading processes can be, and that however sophistica­ted they may be, vulnerabil­ities lurk.

ION first noticed an issue was preventing access to some of its systems at 2:30 a.m. London time. It took the Dublin-based firm — founded by Italian tycoon Andrea Pignataro — more than five hours to confirm the attack by Russian ransomware gang LockBit, according to correspond­ence from ION seen by Bloomberg.

It wasn’t long before the 42 ION clients affected started reporting difficulti­es. The U.S. clearing arm of Dutch lender ABN Amro Bank sent out a note to clients saying the attack would delay overnight processing, and that it was being forced to deal with transactio­ns manually. StoneX Financial said it was taking “alternativ­e measures” to clear trades and prioritizi­ng expiring contracts. Marex resorted to providing clients “indicative” values of transactio­ns in their accounts.

On the London Metal Exchange one of the last venues in the world where trading still takes place face to face — the return to manual processing was familiar for many veteran brokers, but it also provided an opportunit­y for younger staff to prove their technologi­cal prowess.

When ION’s systems went down, a team of coders at one London brokerage scrambled to build their own ad-hoc system to match off clients’ trades, and they had it up and running within hours, according to one person familiar with the matter.

But while those types of creative efforts have helped to mitigate the fallout so far, the challenges are growing as the crisis rolls on. Informally, the London brokerage has warned the LME that it expects dealers to reduce activity because of friction in processing trades, reducing liquidity, the person said.

Fear of contagion prompted the Futures Industry Associatio­n to hold over half a dozen calls over multiple days to give members a chance to talk through the situation and share relevant informatio­n. More than 600 people dialed in to one of these calls. Some were clients of ION, directly impacted by the attack. Others discussed potential ripple effects.

A spokesman for ION declined to comment on whether it had taken part in the FIA calls.

By the end of the day on Tuesday, neither the FIA nor the Commodity Futures Trading Commission — the top U.S. derivative­s regulator — disclosed or could confirm how many firms had been affected and how much money was locked up in trades handled by ION, said people who took part in the calls and asked not to be identified, citing confidenti­ality.

The software company never joined the discussion, the people said.

The outage, which is still ongoing, affected vital processes including the matching of trades, the calculatio­n of margin calls and regulatory reporting on large market positions. That left many clients in the dark about whether they were making or losing money, and prompted calls for more collateral, the people said.

It was only then that customers found out there was a problem, with many more only discoverin­g it when Bloomberg News reported the event on Wednesday morning, one of the people said.

On Wednesday, CME, Interconti­nental Exchange and Cboe said that their members had experience­d issues with a third-party software vendor. Those issues could affect the timing of publishing exchange reports by the end of the day, the firms said. The London Metal Exchange and Euronext also acknowledg­ed that some of its clients had been affected.

“The LME has been closely moni

toring liquidity across all venues since the incident occurred, and has not yet seen any evidence of liquidity being affected,” the exchange said in an emailed statement. “We continue to work closely with affected members to help them continue their business as normally as possible, and reduce any wider impact.”

The issue is “currently isolated to a small number of smaller and midsize firms, and does not pose a systemic risk to the financial sector,” according to a statement from Todd Conklin, deputy assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Cybersecur­ity and Critical Infrastruc­ture Protection.

Regulators in the U.K., including the

Financial Conduct Authority, started an investigat­ion into the incident, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified because the matter is private.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion is also seeking informatio­n on the cyberattac­k and reached out to ION executives, people familiar with the matter said. The agency is aware of the situation, it said in a statement.

ION told clients on Thursday that its systems won’t be fully operationa­l until Feb. 5, and the firm still hasn’t been able to start several crucial recovery steps, according to email correspond­ence seen by Bloomberg. The firm also told broker StoneX that it has brought in “multiple industry leading security firms to assist in their investigat­ions and remediatio­n plans,” according to a copy of a memo.

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