Tuesday, February 21, 2012

US lawmakers want answers on exchange hack attacks.

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK: Senior U.S. lawmakers demanded answers on Tuesday from regulators and financial exchange operators about computer hacking attacks.

Already under investigation by the FBI, the attacks were acknowledged over the weekend by the operator of the Nasdaq Stock Market, Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. Its shares were down 3.2 percent in midafternoon trading.

News of the incursions came amid growing concern about the stability of high-speed, computerized trading systems that can drive wild market swings. A "flash crash" that occurred on May 6 of last year saw U.S. stock markets plunge 700 points within minutes.

"The world must have confidence in the technological security of our financial markets," said U.S. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus and committee member Scott Garrett, both Republicans, in a joint statement.

The two sent a letter to Nasdaq OMX, other exchange groups, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission seeking reassurances.

"At a time when investor confidence remains fragile, the hacking of a network that contains nonpublic, inside, material information that could be used illegally to gain a trading advantage is especially disconcerting," they said.

Nasdaq OMX was not immediately available for comment.

EXCHANGE PARENT FOUND SUSPICIOUS FILES

Nasdaq OMX acknowledged in a statement on Saturday that it had found "suspicious files" on its U.S. computer servers and determined that hackers could have affected one of its Internet-based client applications. The FBI and forensic firms helped Nasdaq conduct the probe, which is ongoing.

The company said there was no evidence that the hackers obtained customer information or that any of the company s trading platforms were compromised. The files were found in a Web application called Director s Desk and have been removed.

The incident did not become public until The Wall Street Journal reported it late on Friday.

Eighteen percent of all U.S. stock trading last month took place on one of Nasdaq OMX s venues.

Sang Lee, a managing partner specializing in market structure at Boston consultancy Aite Group, said it was not surprising that hackers would be drawn to exchanges.

"After all, what better location than exchanges or financial services firms if they are looking for sensitive, potentially lucrative financial information " he said.

Muscat Press and Publishing House SAOC 2011

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

No comments:

Post a Comment