There were no interruptions at the dozens of other U.S. stock exchanges today, including the Nasdaq, so investors were still able to buy and sell NYSE-listed stocks easily.
The NYSE didn't say what the problem was but described it as internal issue and not the result of a breach of its systems.
The market was already lower when the trading halt occurred at about 11:30 a.M. Eastern time as traders worried about China's failure to halt a plunge in its shares and talks remained stuck between Greece and its lenders. NYSE trading resumed at 3:10 p.M. ET.
The trading halt at the NYSE came on the same day United Continental had to temporarily ground its flights across the country because of computer problems. There was no indication the outages were related.
Tom Caldwell, who runs an investment firm with stakes in several exchanges, says there are some 60 exchanges and trading venues that can take orders when one goes down, so investors shouldn't get rattled.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said President Obama was briefed by White House counterterrorism and homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco and chief of staff Denis McDonough. Earnest said Obama was also briefed on the United Airlines glitch that temporarily grounded its flights.
"There is no indication at this point either that there is malicious activity involved or that it was related to any of the other high profile technology issues that have cropped up today."
FBI Director James Comey, testifying before the Senate Intelligence committee, said the agency has been in contact with the NYSE, United Continental, and the Wall Street Journal, whose web site briefly went down today as well.
