Subscribe

Fidelity says online brokerage orders were delayed, duplicated

Fidelity Investments said an undisclosed number of brokerage clients were affected Monday.

Fidelity Investments said an undisclosed number of brokerage clients had online orders delayed or accidentally duplicated on Monday.
The malfunction lasted for about 30 minutes beginning at about 9:45 a.m. New York time, Stephen Austin, a spokesman for Boston-based Fidelity, said in a telephone interview. Fidelity will reimburse any clients who lost money as a result of the error, he said.
“We took prompt steps to resolve this and the site is now performing normally,” Mr. Austin said.
Fidelity oversees $4.5 trillion as a record-keeper for investors in retirement accounts, for financial advisers served by the firm and for individual customers of its online brokerage business. The malfunction comes two months after E*Trade Financial Corp. said some customers were briefly unable to access their brokerage accounts on Jan. 8, locking them out of the market as comments from the Federal Reserve spurred a surge in trading. Charles Schwab Corp. was targeted by a cyberattack in April that disrupted access to its service.
Zachary Prensky, an analyst with Little Bear Investment LLC in New York, said he placed an order to short-sell the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust at 10:02 a.m., which Fidelity filled twice, 20 minutes apart. Mr. Prensky made an extra $1,000 on the mistake when the ETF declined, he said in a telephone interview. Investors benefit from a short sale when a security falls in value.
Fidelity had 19.2 million brokerage accounts and processed an average of 407,400 “commissionable trades” every day during the fourth quarter of 2013, according to the firm’s website. Fidelity also offers broker-dealers clearing and execution services.
(Bloomberg News)

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Behind the scenes: “Impact” cost me 15 pounds but the payoff has been priceless

From the beaches of Haiti to breaking board with gang members in North Carolina, this documentary has changed me forever

5 questions about ‘Impact’

The what, why and how behind InvestmentNews' documentary on impact investing with the film's executive producer, Steve Distante

Riskalyze aims down market with retirement solutions platform

A couple years ago, as Riskalyze surged from four to 200 employees, it’s CEO Aaron Klein realized that they were “like the cobbler’s kid who didn’t have shoes” when it came to a 401(k) plan. But with a closer look at retirement products, he quickly realized that there was a bigger opportunity for advisers.

‘Wolf of Wall Street’s’ Belfort sees pay top $100M

Jordan Belfort, whose memoir “The Wolf of Wall Street” was turned into a film by Martin Scorsese, expects to earn more than he made as stockbroker this year, allowing him to repay the victims of his financial fraud, allowing him to repay the victims of his financial fraud.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print