London Stock Exchange in huge outage

The London Stock Exchange has returned to normal after an outage yesterday in the UK that ceased trading for the longest period in eight years.

The exchange said the outage did not mean its electronic trading system was in any way vulnerable to increased trading volumes, as some reports had suggested. According to a spokeswoman from the exchange, the outage occurred after 45 minutes of normal operation at 09:15 (BST) yesterday in the UK.

The outage was not fixed until 16:30 yesterday afternoon, effectively wiping a full day's trading from the books.

The spokeswoman told ZDNet.com.au's sister site, silicon.com, that the exchange, which switched to its digital trading platform TradElect in June 2007, had started trading normally again after a fix was put in place. She said the problem had been identified, but at the time of writing the exchange had not revealed the reason behind the glitch.

According to the spokeswoman, the exchange noticed there was "insufficient connectivity" to the market as a whole at 08:45 and, as a result, it decided to suspend connectivity entirely at 09:15.

A spokesman for the exchange told silicon.com: "It was a software issue relating to connectivity where two unpredictable events coincided and the fix now prevents these two things happening at the same time. As it is not a hardware issue, the outage was not related to volumes and that is the reason why we did not automatically switch to a backup site."

The outage comes in an important month for the exchange. The platform was expected to begin to offer trades in Italian equities this month, made possible through the acquisition of Borse Italia in 2007.

This month was also the deadline for the platform to reach 10,000 continuous messages per second.

Advertisement

Talkback 1 comments

    Of course, it was .NET on XP David Gerard -- 11/09/08

    If they'd been running Vista, they'd have been laughing. http://tinyurl.com/56dvdt

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Suzanne Tindal Sick of broken tender sites
    Some of the state governments desperately need to invest in more user-friendly tender sites so that looking for information on government tenders doesn't have to be a game of blind man's bluff.
  • Array Cyberwar: What is it good for?
    In this week's episode, Cyberwar. What is Australia's place in the world of digital warfare? What are the implications for the NBN?
  • Array Is wholesale-only backhaul just a pipedream?
    The potential acquisition of Pipe Networks by SP Telemedia has raised the question about whether vertically integrated backhaul providers will mean higher wholesale prices for ISP customers.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured