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FCA Cites Inadequate Controls and Staffing Failures During Historic Short Squeeze
FCA Penalizes LME for Mishandling Nickel Price Surge
The London Metal Exchange (LME) has been fined £9.2 million ($11.9 million) by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) following its investigation into the March 2022 nickel short squeeze. The FCA concluded that the exchange lacked sufficient systems and controls to manage extreme volatility during the weeklong price spike, when nickel prices surged past $100,000 per tonne.
Between March 4–8, 2022, the nickel market experienced unprecedented stress. The crisis was triggered by massive over-the-counter short positions held by Tsingshan, a leading Chinese nickel producer. In response, the LME suspended nickel trading for eight days and controversially canceled all trades executed on March 8.
Regulators Cite Lack of Price Bands and Untrained Staff
The FCA identified LME’s failure to use automatic volatility controls, such as price bands, as a major weakness. Furthermore, the exchange’s decision-making process was too reliant on senior staff who were unavailable during Asian trading hours, when the crisis escalated.
At the height of the squeeze, junior operations staff—lacking crisis training—disabled price bands instead of escalating the situation. This action allowed nickel prices to rise faster than they should have. The exchange’s failure to report abnormal activity to its Hong Kong office worsened the volatility.
LME Implements Reforms, Wins Litigation Battles
The LME accepted the FCA’s findings and qualified for a 30% fine reduction. Since the crisis, the exchange has introduced daily price limits across all metals and improved oversight of OTC positions. These reforms aim to prevent similar breakdowns in market order.
Legal fallout followed the LME’s decision to cancel trades, with Elliott Management and Jane Street suing for losses of $456 million and $15 million, respectively. However, the UK High Court ruled in LME’s favor, and the UK Supreme Court recently denied Elliott permission to appeal.
The FCA’s decision underscores the critical need for robust trading oversight, especially during periods of extreme market stress.
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