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Singapore Said to Consider Giving Traders Lunch Break Back (1)

(Bloomberg) -- Singapore stock traders may finally get their lunch break back.

Singapore Exchange Ltd., which runs the city’s equity market, is considering reinstating the midday intermission, according to people familiar with the matter. SGX in March 2011 scrapped the break, which lasted from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. every day, in an effort to boost trading.

The bourse is expected to have a public consultation on the issue in the coming weeks, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. SGX will also propose a test that would widen the price increment at which shares are quoted to bring day traders back, according to the people. The proposals come after traders and SGX officials had several meetings since Loh Boon Chye became chief executive officer in July 2015, the people said.

When SGX cut the midday break, then-CEO Magnus Bocker said in January 2011 the move would make Singapore “one of the most accessible markets in Asia and in the world.” Having continuous trading from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. could also boost volume by as much as 10 percent, Bocker said.

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Many Asian stock markets have a midday break, including Hong Kong, mainland China and Malaysia.

The daily average value of shares traded on SGX this year has risen 6.4 percent, to $809 million, compared with the average for 2016, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. While up from last year, it’s down from $1.12 billion a day in 2013, the year of a penny-stock crash that has been blamed for shaking confidence in the city’s markets. An average of $1.18 billion shares changed hands each day in 2010, before the intermission was abolished, the data show.

SGX said in an e-mailed response to queries that it doesn’t comment on speculation.

Tick-Size Idea

The exchange’s tick-size proposal would reward brokers for making markets in less liquid stocks by widening the spread they earn when buying and selling shares, the people said. That could encourage trading in small-cap companies, they said.

If the plan goes ahead, it would be at least the third time in a decade that SGX has tweaked stock spreads. In 2011, it cut tick sizes to offer what it called “one of Asia’s most cost-competitive trading environments.” It made a similar move in 2007.

The U.S. in October started a two-year test that raised ticks for small-company stocks amid complaints from exchanges that liquidity has dried up. Japan Exchange Group in December 2014 said it was backtracking on tick cuts for some of the biggest companies less than six months after it was implemented because it failed to get the boost it sought.

SGX in 2015 cut the board lot size, or trading unit, investors needed to buy to 100 from 1,000 to help make higher-priced shares easier to invest. Last year, it consulted on having at least 10 percent of shares in the initial public offering of companies on its main venue to boost retail participation.

(Adds traders meetings with SGX in third paragraph.)

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrea Tan in Singapore at atan17@bloomberg.net.

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

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.