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Wall Street & Technology May 25, 2005 Dan Safarik |
A Chip Off the Block The New York Stock Exchange plans to modernize its trading model with the upcoming Hybrid system, which, in part, is meant to draw back the large orders that have migrated to newer, electronic block-trading systems. |
Wall Street & Technology October 26, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Streaming Liquidity Seth Merrin is hoping to fix the inefficiencies of the U.S. equity market with a new version of Liquidnet that brings in retail-size order flow to match against the existing wholesale liquidity pool. |
Wall Street & Technology February 12, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Changing the Rules of the Game A change in the trade-through rule now on the SEC's agenda could lead to more direct-access and smart order-routing tools. |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Larry Tabb |
NYSE: Fast Market or No Market? If the NYSE becomes more electronic, its owners (the specialists and floor brokers) will be disadvantaged, and possibly jobless. |
Wall Street & Technology November 18, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Crossing Networks Attract New Entrants With all the buzz around crossing networks as a means of searching for hidden liquidity, two new contenders are eyeing the space dominated by Liquidnet, POSIT and Pipeline Trading Systems. |
Wall Street & Technology May 17, 2006 |
Dipping Into Dark Pools of Liquidity As private crossing networks and related nonquoting sources of liquidity, known as "dark books," vie for market share among block traders, they are creating a highly fragmented market for block trading, according to a new report. |
Wall Street & Technology June 29, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Reinventing the Relationship Technology and regulatory scrutiny have placed pressure on the buy-side traders to figure out how much it is paying for executions. |
Wall Street & Technology January 24, 2006 Paul Allen |
Turning the Tide As ECNs and other alternative trading systems have emerged, fragmentation in the capital markets has increased. But with the acquisitions of Archipelago by the NYSE and of the Brut and INET ECNs by Nasdaq, the tide may be turning. |
Wall Street & Technology July 26, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
The Buy Side Takes Charge Access to aggregators, crossing networks and algorithms is changing the buy-side trading desk. |
Wall Street & Technology February 3, 2005 |
REG NMS Cheat Sheet A synopsis of the 371-page SEC document outlining the Regulation National Market System proposal, with one-page summaries of each of its four components. |
Wall Street & Technology July 26, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Making Markets Move The race to become a fast market may lead exchanges to join forces with ECNs. |
Wall Street & Technology June 21, 2004 |
Algo-Trading Meets Direct Access As buy-side firms take more control over executing orders, there is an increasing interest in algorithmic-trading strategies combined with direct-access trading platforms. |
Bank Technology News April 2004 John Adams |
Lending A Hand... To Trading Without One BofA Joins CSFB and Goldman In "Low-Touch" Trading Space Race -- one of the newest frontiers in trading, where thousands of shares of stocks, bonds and other instruments move electronically and a century of Wall Street tradition fades by the day. |
Wall Street & Technology March 21, 2006 |
Building Blocks For Competition New research indicates that the next three years will see the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq attempt to win back block order flow from independent crossing network providers, and they may very well succeed. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Reg NMS Tops the CIO Agenda The regulation to modernize the National Market System is shaping up as the single most important issue that chief information officers of buy-side and sell-side firms will focus on in 2005. |
Bank Technology News September 2004 Michael Sisk |
Trading: Direct Execution Goes Mainstream The need to offer direct execution is all the greater now that the New York Stock Exchange is pushing ahead with it's Direct Plus program. |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Cracking The Street's New Math Algorithmic trades are sweeping the stock market. But how secure are they? |
Wall Street & Technology July 1, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
The New Sell-Side Trader: Execution Consultant Brokers are morphing into execution consultants to advise the buy side on selecting algorithms and measuring performance. But how will the sell side reinvent the institutional sales trader? |
Wall Street & Technology February 27, 2005 Larry Tabb |
The NYSE Floor: A Question of Control What is it about the floor - the history, the frenzy, the money, the legacy? Whatever it is, the NYSE floor, as it stands today, is under threat - and not just from dissatisfied institutional investors, but also from market restructuring proposals |
Bank Technology News November 2007 |
Alternative Trading: ECNs, Dark Pools Gain Ground on Exchanges The trading venues running outside the traditional NYSE/NASDAQ exchange channels have their advantages-but also some limitations from their own success. |
Wall Street & Technology June 22, 2004 Larry Tabb |
Providing Service in an Increasingly Electronic World The way in which brokers traditionally manage their relationships with the buy side needs to change. |
Wall Street & Technology June 28, 2005 |
The Next Big Thing Four analysts predict what shape they believe the future landscape of financial services technology will take. |
Wall Street & Technology August 27, 2004 Larry Tabb |
Independent Aggregation: An Oxymoron Aggregation's time has come, but independent providers have gone. It is technology that the industry needs and brokers can't live without, but does the act of acquiring a platform devalue it? |
Wall Street & Technology June 21, 2004 |
Best Execution Drives Buy-Side OMS Suppliers Buy-side order-management systems are being impacted by demand for electronic trading, continuous compliance and new requirements to handle complex derivative instruments |
Wall Street & Technology May 25, 2005 Larry Tabb |
No Touching: Algo Trading Leaps Forward The leaders in the no-touch market are significantly ahead. They have the resources to push the technology out into the market and the support teams to train, customize and drive adoption (while at the same time, buy-side firms are reducing their broker ranks). |
Wall Street & Technology February 14, 2006 |
Stealth Algorithm Instinet unveiled Cobra, a stealth algorithm that, according to the company, removes portions of liquidity when available, leaving the stock's spread unchanged. |
Wall Street & Technology November 29, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Want an Algorithm With That? Major brokerage houses are franchising their algorithmic trading strategies to smaller firms that are feeling pressure to offer the service. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Robert Barker |
Taking Stock Of An Electronic Exchange The operator of an electronic trading system called Archipelago Exchange, or ArcaEx, is getting ready to ask public investors to take a stake in its improbable dream. On Mar. 2 the Chicago firm filed papers to prepare for an initial public offering to be led by Goldman Sachs |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Larry Tabb |
Risk in a Real-Time World The world is getting riskier. Not only has geopolitical strife changed compliance risk, but new trading, governance and capital-allocation mechanisms are changing traditional risk measures as well. |
BusinessWeek May 9, 2005 Weber et al. |
The Tremors From Two Trading Titans As the Big Board and NASDAQ buy rivals and beef up, how will investors fare? Will they be better served by the mergers? |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Pre-Trade Analysis Brokers are developing pre-trade analytics in connection with their algorithms to help buy-side customers determine the best algorithms to use. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Julie Gallagher |
Data Latency Market-data latency has gotten much attention on the sell side, but like so many other industry issues, the buy side is just now playing catch-up. |
Bank Technology News November 2004 Shane Kite |
Trading: Direct Execution Players Get Beefy Banks and brokers are stocking up on tech and management tools, bundling direct access with algorithmic trading, as the industry gets more competitive than ever. |
Bank Technology News June 2005 Glen Fest |
Irreconcilable Differences? When Jerry Putnam used to describe the New York Stock Exchange and its practices, the CEO of Archipelago Holdings was prone to using words like monopolistic, blackball and pathology. |
Wall Street & Technology October 20, 2006 Cory Levine |
Sorice to Lead Merrill And ITG's Block Alert Steven Sorice has been appointed CEO of Block Alert, the block crossing network joint venture from New York-based Merrill Lynch and Investment Technology Group (ITG). |
Wall Street & Technology January 23, 2007 Jessica Pallay |
In the Search of Liquidity: The Time Is Now Now that Reg NMS is finally here, are firms ready to access 30 or more trading venues in their search for liquidity? After a year of investment in technology, firms need to demonstrate that their systems are up to the challenge. |
The Motley Fool February 4, 2005 Rich Duprey |
Instinet's Instant Profit Electronic broker-dealer posts a profit and beats the Street. |
InternetNews April 22, 2005 Jim Wagner |
NASDAQ to Acquire Instinet The $1.88 billion cash deal ups the stakes in the competition between the NYSE and NASDAQ. |
Wall Street & Technology April 26, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Broker Research: What's It Worth? The securities industry is hoping that the SEC will clear up the uncertainties surrounding soft dollars and determine once and for all who is responsible for placing a value on proprietary research. |
Wall Street & Technology November 18, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Transition Management Evolves In the technology-intensive business, global custodians and index managers now are vying with broker-dealers to help pension clients realign their portfolios. |
The Motley Fool November 19, 2004 Tom Taulli |
Is Instinet Group the Next Deal? Deals are sprouting everywhere. One for the electronic securities trader might be on tap. |
U.S. Banker June 2005 Glen Fest |
Opposition Swells Against The Two Proposed Mergers In the wake of April's stock- exchange merger announcements by both the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, a question seems to be surfacing a month later: Is anyone happy with the proposed consolidations of the major exchanges? |
The Motley Fool May 3, 2005 Rich Duprey |
Instinet: Nasdaq's Sly Scoop Nasdaq will acquire the electronic broker-dealer's leading trading platform. Investors, take note. |
Wall Street & Technology March 21, 2006 Larry Tabb |
Reg NMS: A Pox on All Your Houses The SEC's Reg NMS will significantly alter the way the markets and the industry as a whole operate. Instead of the market consolidation we have seen over the past few years, we are seeing a market fragmentation, as regional exchanges retool and ECNs proliferate. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 |
Up Front No Bank Is Spared From Basel II... Data Insecurities... Mutual Funds Out of Favor?... etc. |
Wall Street & Technology July 23, 2004 Kerry Massaro |
Reinventing Themselves If you look back at the late-'90s, when new ECNs were being introduced into the marketplace regularly and a huge rivalry had developed between the ECNs and the exchanges, the securities industry's last consideration would have been that the two would join forces. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Algorithmic Trading Buy-side firms are gravitating toward rules-based systems that are often supplied by brokers. These mathematical models analyze every quote and trade in the stock market, identify liquidity opportunities and turn that information into intelligent trading decisions. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 Jim Middlemiss |
CIO Challenge As markets make the seemingly inevitable transition to automated trading, former floor-based traders need to relearn their craft. |
AskMen.com Michael Estrin |
How to Become a Day Trader Whether you're cut out to trade online depends on a number of factors. Here are some things to consider before you put your paycheck in the market, as well as some tips if you think you've got what it takes. |
The Motley Fool March 25, 2004 Selena Maranjian |
The Least You Can Invest Don't think that you need to buy at least 100 shares. |