The specific nature of the contravening conduct: Rule 5.7.1(b)
48 The parties agreed that the contravention by State One of r 5.7.1(b) of the Rules was properly described in the following terms:
Having regard to certain of the matters identified in rule 5.7.2 of the ASX Market Integrity Rules, at the times Mr Tang placed 19 of the Orders on 1 and 2 March 2011 (the Relevant Orders), ASIC alleges and State One now admits that it ought reasonably to have suspected that those Orders were placed by Mr Tang with the intention of creating a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or price of, TIS shares.
In particular, having regard to:
a. the concerns and suspicions raised by the Initial Tang Orders (referred to in paragraphs 65 to 71 below);
b. the circumstances of the Relevant Orders (referred to in paragraphs 73 to 76 below),
a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One ought to have suspected that each of the Relevant Orders had been placed with the intention of creating a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or price of, TIS shares.
Therefore, State One contravened rule 5.7.1(b)(iii) of the ASX Market Integrity Rules when it entered Bids into the market pursuant to the Relevant Orders at a time when it ought reasonably to have suspected that Mr Tang had placed those Orders with the intention of creating, a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or the price of, TIS shares.
The Initial Tang Orders
The circumstances of the Relevant Orders include Mr Tang's trading in TIS in the period before 1 and 2 March 2011, in particular his trading in TIS between 8 and 28 February 2011 (the Initial Orders), and the SMARTS Alerts triggered by the Initial Orders.
In that regard:
a. On the first day of Mr Tang's trading, 8 February 2011, two SMARTS Alerts were triggered. The first was a "Price Driver" alert which noted that the Relevant Account accounted for a disproportionally large number of price increases compared to the volume bought, that is 70% of price increases compared to 23.6% of buying volume. The second alert was a "Significant volume in the last 2 minutes of trading" alert noting that in the last two minutes, Mr Tang initiated trades for 37,000 TIS (being 66.1% of his total daily volume).
b. On 9 February 2011, Mr Tang's trading in TIS shares triggered a further 4 alerts. While two of the alerts received that day were identical - namely the "Price Driver (House) (Up)" and "Price Driver (Account) (Up)" alerts which noted that Mr Tang's trading had accounted for a disproportionally large number of price increases compared to the volume bought - they were not the only alerts triggered on that day. There were a further two "Pattern" alerts which suggested there might be a pattern of trading over 8-9 February 2011 period.
c. On 10 February 2011, Mr Tang's trading in TIS shares triggered a further 5 alerts;
d. On 11 February 2011 Mr Tang's trading triggered 5 more alerts.
Following the receipt of the above alerts, by mid-February 2011, a reasonable Market Participant would have undertaken a preliminary review of the Tang account.
Had this preliminary analysis been undertaken - which would have involved reviewing the trading that triggered the above alerts (using SMARTS) - that would have indicated to a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One that Mr Tang was responsible for price increases in TIS for the 4 trading days as follows:
a. 8 February 2011: 7 out of 10 price increases (that is 70% compared to 23.6% of buying volume);
b. 9 February 2011: 10 out of 10 price increases (that is 100% compared to 15.5% of buying volume);
c. 10 February 2011: 9 out of 9 price increases (that is 100% compared to 8.9% of buying volume); and
d. 11 February 2011: 7 out of 7 price increases (that is 100% compared to 17.9% of buying volume).
That preliminary analysis would not have dispelled the concerns created by the 8-11 February 2011 SMARTS Alerts, such that a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One thereafter would have communicated its concerns to the client and sought explanations from its client, questioned staff and would have analysed Mr tang's trading in more detail.
Had that further analysis been undertaken, in the period up to 1 March 2011, a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One would have identified by that time (i.e. prior to the commencement of trading on 1 March 2011) that Mr Tang's trading in TIS in the period 8-28 February 2011:
a. appeared inconsistent with the history of or prior recent trading in TIS;
b. materially altered the market for, or price of, TIS;
c. appeared to have been timed to restore or increase the price of TIS; and
d. generally exhibited the following patterns:
i. the entry of a low price Bid which was later amended, shortly after a fall in the price for TIS, to the priority offer price at reduced volume, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price;
ii. the entry of a low volume Bid which was subsequently amended, shortly after a fall in the price of TIS, to the priority offer price with no change in volume, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price;
iii. the entry of a low-price Bid and then a subsequent amendment to the price of the Bid to a price above the priority offer price at a sufficient volume to buy all the volume on offer at the priority offer price together with small volume of TIS at the next higher priority offer price, resulting in a trade at the higher priority offer price;
iv. the entry of a Bid at the priority offer price for TIS at a level that was higher than the last trade price for TIS, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price; and
v. setting the closing price for TIS,
(together the Trading Patterns).
By reason of its identification of the matters specified above, a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One would have suspected by no later than the commencement of trading on 1 March 2011 that Mr Tang had been placing the Initial Orders with the intention of creating a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or price of, TIS. Upon forming that suspicion, a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One would have immediately suspended Mr Tang's access to State One's IRESS AOP system and required all of his trades to be approved by a DTR.
In the present case, Mr Mollett's notations in his spreadsheet indicate that a senior person at State One monitored the SMARTS Alerts, considered those alerts and made the notations on 8 and 9 February 2011. However, a significant problem with State One's handling of Mr Tang's trading was Mr Mollett's continued reliance on an initial discussion with Mr Nofal. State One failed to take the action outlined in paragraph 67 above, in respect of subsequent continued trading that triggered alerts.
The Relevant Orders
State One did not take this action. Rather, it allowed Mr Tang to access State One's IRESS AOP system (and trade in TIS on 1 and 2 March 2011). On those days, Mr Tang placed 6 amendments to the Initial Orders, 17 new orders to buy TIS and 15 amendments to those new orders. State One through its AOP, entered corresponding Bids for each of those orders into the Market.
A reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One would have appreciated:
a. the Relevant Orders (being 19 of the orders placed on 1 and 2 March 2011) were inconsistent with the history of or recent trading in TIS. In that regard, by reason of the nature of Mr Tang's trading in TIS in the period 8 to 28 February 2011 (which would have been analysed by the reasonable market participant as summarised immediately above), from the commencement of trading on 1 March 2011, a reasonable Market Participant in the position of State One would have observed a pattern of low volume Bids at high prices which was inconsistent with recent (non-Tang) trading on the ASX;
b. at the time the Relevant Orders were placed, Tang had an apparent interest in creating false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or the price of, TIS because of the size of his holding of TIS, which was 612,500 TIS at the commencement of trading on 1 March 2011;
c. 17 of those 19 Relevant Orders:
i. fell into one or more of the following Trading Patterns, including:
1. 7 (namely Bids 141, 143, 144 on 1 March 2011 and 148, 150, 151 and 156 on 2 March 2011) being the entry of a lower price Bid which was later amended, shortly after a fall in the price for TIS, to the priority offer price at reduced volume, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price;
2. 5 (namely Bids 139, 140, 146 on 1 March 2011 and 147 and 153 on 2 March 2011) being the entry of a low volume Bid which was subsequently amended, shortly after a fall in the price of TIS, to the priority offer price with no change in volume, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price;
3. 4 (namely Bids 142 on 1 March and 145, 152 and 157 on 2 March 2011) being the entry of a low-price Bid and then a subsequent amendment to the price of the Bid to a price above the priority offer price at a sufficient volume to buy all the volume on offer at the priority offer price together with small volume of TIS at the next higher priority offer price, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price;
4. 1 (namely Bid 154 on 2 March 2011) being the entry of a Bid at the priority offer price for TIS at a level that was higher than the last trade price for TIS, resulting in a trade at the priority offer price;
5. 2 (namely Bids no. 142 on 1 March 2011 and 156 on 2 March 2011) that were likely to mark the close; and
6. 11 (namely Bids no. 140, 141, 144 on 1 March 2011) and Bids no. 147, 148, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154 and 156 on 2 March 2011) that had the effect of restoring the price of TIS shares to that which Mr Tang had previously paid before a non-Tang trade caused the price to fall;
ii. appeared to constitute an unusual series of orders which materially altered the market for and increased the price of TIS shares; and
d. the remaining 2 of those Relevant Orders were for an unusually large volume of TIS shares and were placed at a price well below the best Bid and thus appeared to lack any legitimate commercial reason for their placement.
By reason of the matters above, ASIC alleges and State One admits that it ought reasonably have suspected that Mr Tang had placed the 19 Relevant Orders with the intention of creating a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or price of, TIS.
Accordingly, in entering into the Market each of the 19 Bids (that corresponded to the 19 Relevant Orders), State One acted contrary to rule 5.7.1(b)(iii) of the ASX Market Integrity Rules.