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Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good
Traders work on the trading floor of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, operated by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd. (HKEx), during the first day of trading after lunar new year in Hong Kong, China (Photographer: Xaume Olleros/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. is about to become the newest member of a once unthinkable club: stock exchanges without a trading floor.

HKEX will shut its iconic Trading Hall on Friday, 31 years after opening the space in the heart of the city’s financial district. While it survived longer than counterparts in Singapore and Tokyo, Hong Kong’s floor had become increasingly irrelevant amid the rise of electronic trading. The last time HKEX bothered to publish figures in 2014, floor transactions comprised just 0.2 percent of total turnover.

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

The closing has been met with a mix of resignation and nostalgia by local traders, some of whom spent the bulk of their working lives in the space, shouting orders through the 1987 crash, the dot-com bubble, the SARS outbreak, and countless other booms and busts. As the digital revolution pushed more and more trades from humans to computers, the floor got quieter and quieter: daily attendance dwindled to about 30 recently from 600 in 2000.

“I’m going to miss the Trading Hall a lot,” said Catherina Lai, a director of the securities unit at Mason Group Holdings Ltd. She’s been working in the brokerage industry since 1985 and was one of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange’s first floor traders. “I sat near the hallway, so a lot of people came over and asked me about the market.”

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

The Trading Hall opened in 1986, when four bourses combined to form the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Herding all the city’s brokers under one roof helped bring a sense of order to what had been a chaotic market, said Christopher Cheung, chairman of Christfund Securities Ltd. and a former member of Hong Kong’s Far East Stock Exchange. Before the merger, shares would sometimes trade at different prices from one venue to the next, he said.

“When there were four exchanges, everyone was trading separately and didn’t know what other people were doing,” Cheung, who is also a lawmaker representing brokerages, said in an interview. “With the integrated trading floor, the vibe made people more actively participate.”

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

A year after its opening, the floor played host to one of Hong Kong’s biggest market collapses. The rout began with an 11 percent drop in the benchmark Hang Seng Index on Oct. 19, 1987 -- later known as Black Monday -- and accelerated the following week despite the exchange’s decision to shut for four days. It took almost four years for the gauge to reclaim its pre-crash high.

“It was the darkest day in the Trading Hall,” Lai said. “Once the market reopened, everyone was selling. Nobody knew when the market would go back to normal.”

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

The floor’s steady decline into irrelevance began in 1996, when the first off-site order was sent.

Technological improvements did more than just change brokers’ physical locations; they also automated some of the most tedious aspects of the job. Before trading went paperless, Lai said she used to spend hours on menial work, like gluing pre-paid stamps (for the city’s stamp duty) on share transfer forms.

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

While trading floors are increasingly rare these days, some markets have resisted the temptation to go completely electronic. The New York Stock Exchange still has its floor at 11 Wall Street, where the opening bell is a fixture of business television every weekday morning. BOX Options Exchange, which is about 40 percent owned by Toronto-based TMX Group Ltd., won approval in August to open a trading floor in Chicago. BOX says face-to-face dealing helps derivatives traders get a better view of pricing and liquidity.

In Hong Kong, the shift away from humans may accelerate. HKEX is considering asking the government to remove or reduce the city’s stamp duty on stock transactions, according to a person familiar with the bourse’s thinking, a move that could attract more algorithmic and high-frequency traders.

Hong Kong's Iconic Trading Floor Is the Latest to Close for Good

As for the old trading floor, HKEX plans to use the space to bring the city’s financial community together. After a renovation, it will host conferences, exhibitions and ceremonies, according to an exchange spokesman. There may also be a small history section for visitors to see how the floor looked in its glory days.

--With assistance from Hannah Dormido

To contact the reporters on this story: Benjamin Robertson in Hong Kong at brobertson29@bloomberg.net, Alfred Liu in Hong Kong at aliu226@bloomberg.net, Kana Nishizawa in Hong Kong at knishizawa5@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Mamudi at smamudi@bloomberg.net, Michael Patterson

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