-Caveat Lector-

>From The Guardian (London)
http://www.newsunlimited.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,80980,00.html

Germans fluff their date with destiny

Jill Treanor and John Cassy
Friday September 10, 1999

Technical problems at the German futures and options exchange yesterday
fuelled fears in City dealing rooms that the markets could face crisis as a
result of the millennium computer bug.
The computer glitches, which prevented some firms from trading and running
the risk of potential losses, took place yesterday - numerically written
9.9.99. Market regulators and computer experts had seen yesterday, while not
quite a dry run for the turn of the year, as a test for systems ahead of the
real millennium bug.

Yesterday was significant because the date - 9.9.99 - was used in old
computer conventions to indiciate to programs that they should stop
performing certain tasks.

Any hiccups which emerge after yesterday's trading will send severe warnings
to the markets about the potential for meltdown in trading early in the new
year if computers fail to recognise the last two digits of the year 2000.

Dealers fear that if computers stop working they will not be able to trade,
which might leave them exposed to enormous losses.

The rumours of problems were not confined to the German exchange. The
internal message board at one leading investment bank in London warned of
problems with price information received from Simex, the Singapore futures
exchange. The message, posted as a warning by the bank's traders in
Singapore, said that the problems were caused by 9/9/99 glitches.

The Eurex exchange in Frankfurt insisted that problems incurred by its
clients first thing yesterday morning were not connected to the 9/9/99
computer problem. However, brokers claimed that in response to their initial
inquiries, the exchange had blamed the date problem.

Some users of the electronic German exchange had been forced to re-start
their computers yesterday because they had stalled overnight. A spokesman
for Eurex said: "The problems which occurred were not related to Y2K or the
9/9/99 problem."

Eurex said the problem, quickly resolved, was caused by the failure of some
computers to receive a signal, which could have happened on any day of the
week.

One source in London insisted yesterday: "Eurex admitted to members early on
that it was having 9/9/99 problems."

The City regulator, the Finanial Services Authority, had asked the firms it
regulates to alert it to any problems encountered, but had not been told of
any.

--
Dan S

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