UT (Tax & Chancery) UT-2022-000134 UT-2022-000135 UT-2022-000137 - [2025] UKUT 00214 (TCC)
Upper Tribunal Tax and Chancery Chamber

UT (Tax & Chancery) UT-2022-000134 UT-2022-000135 UT-2022-000137 - [2025] UKUT 00214 (TCC)

Fecha: 31-Ene-2025

Mr Urra - F7 at 15.31.06.983 on 7 June 2016

Mr Urra - F7 at 15.31.06.983 on 7 June 2016

297.

The trading activity for this instance is set out in Appendix 2 hereto. The length of this Instance is 13 seconds.

298.

As can be seen from the table of trading activity, Mr Urra had placed a Small Order at 15.31.06.983, selling 40 lots iceberged to nine, which was filling. After 18 lots had filled, Mr Urra placed the Large Order, a buy of 444 lots which was live for 1.899 seconds in total, and was cancelled 1.339 seconds after the Small Order filled.

299.

Mr Urra’s evidence was that he had placed the Large Order in pursuance of the Information Discovery Strategy.

300.

This was one of the Instances for which Mr Kasapis had identified a cash bond trade in proximity to the Instance, which could have prompted Mr Urra to speculate that a Large Order might be tempting to a Posited Trader. The cash bond trade was the purchase by MHI of a €10m bond from Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Financial Services LLC (“ICBC”), for which the Small Order was a (partial) hedge. The cash bond trade is timed at 15.36.05, ie after the Instance, but it was a Voice RFQ and we accept that the time for which it was entered was likely to have been after the price had been agreed by the Desk. Mr Urra agreed that this was a plausible match and that the Large Order could have been triggered by the trade with ICBC.

301.

In terms of the activity itself, the Authority relied on:

(1)

Mr Urra was trying to sell his Small Order at or very close to the daily high: the market had been in a rally but had just fallen back at the time of the Instance.

(2)

18 lots of the Small Order had filled within 0.5 seconds of the Small Order being placed. However, trading then paused for ten seconds. It was only after the Large Order was placed that the Small Order continued to fill – trading resumed within 0.2 seconds of the Large Order being placed.

(3)

The Large Order was cancelled 1.339 seconds after the Small Order filled. Whilst Mr Urra’s evidence was that he cancelled the Large Order as he was discouraged by the price action and his best guess was that he had concluded that the order was not going to transact, the Authority relied on the Large Order being live for less than two seconds, submitting this was not enough time to think and reach this conclusion.