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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 1, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Changing of the Guard The NYSE's new Chief Executive John Thain is moving quickly to increase automatic execution on the floor. Will there still be a role for specialists? Will he dismantle the auction model? How far will John Thain go? |
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 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 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. |
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 October 22, 2004 Jim Middlemiss |
Hybrid Market, Myriad Challenges Chief Technology Officer Roger Burkhardt has the unenviable task of automating the New York Stock Exchange and putting it on a level playing field with electronic competitors by creating a hybrid market. |
Wall Street & Technology June 22, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
How Low Can You Go? Reg NMS' proposed formula for allocating market-data revenues among exchanges isn't getting a warm welcome on the Street. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Hybrid Markets: A Migration to the Screen With market regulation in flux, all eyes are on the New York Stock Exchange as it awaits approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for its hybrid-market proposal. |
BusinessWeek December 6, 2004 Amy Borrus |
No More Breaks For The Big Board Why the SEC should stand by its plan to loosen the NYSE's hold on trading |
Wall Street & Technology April 25, 2005 Schmerken & Massaro |
The Fate of ITS In a divided vote, the SEC passed Reg NMS, ushering in a new and improved trade-through rule that will make best price and fast quotations a requirement for U.S. equities trading. What will become of the Intermarket Trading System (ITS)? |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Reg NMS As part of the extreme makeover of the National Market System, the SEC's Reg NMS proposes that market centers route orders to the venue that offers the best price. |
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 January 26, 2004 Mara Der Hovanesian |
The NYSE: A Thousand Cuts ECNs, regional exchanges, brokerages -- they're all taking a piece of the Big Board. |
Wall Street & Technology March 1, 2004 Kerry Massaro |
NYSE a Fast Market? It's humorous to think that the New York Stock Exchange could be classified as a "fast market." |
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 February 14, 2006 Ivy Schmerken |
Brokerage Teams Tackle Reg NMS as Deadline Looms Many financial firms have joined industry committees to make sure that their organizations' interpretations of Regulation National Market System (Reg NMS) are in line with other market participants' views. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 Steve Silberstein |
Dear CIO... Question: How will Reg NMS impact broker-dealers? |
BusinessWeek August 11, 2003 Dwyer & Borrus |
NASDAQ: The Fight of Its Life The once-dazzling market is on the ropes as the bear market, fierce competition -- and hubris -- take their toll. |
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 June 13, 2006 |
Ask the Experts Mark Madoff, co-director of trading at Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, discuses how the U.S. securities market will change as the NYSE and Nasdaq introduce new fee schedules. |
Wall Street & Technology February 21, 2007 Larry Tabb |
Against the Odds, the NYSE Has Successfully Implemented the Hybrid, Acquired Euronext and Become More Profitable New technology, combined with cost-cutting and a large market share, has allowed the NYSE to become more profitable and successful. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2006 John Churchill |
The New Big Board--Or Is That Screen? Despite its dominating presence in the equity trading market as the world's largest exchange, the NYSE is a dinosaur that shows it age every day, doing business the same way it's done it for 214 years. Archipelago, however, will take its heft and program the NYSE Group into the future. |
Wall Street & Technology September 18, 2006 |
Ask The Experts: Mark Madoff, Codirector of Trading at Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities The battle between Nasdaq and the NYSE is not your traditional price war, which usually is characterized by lower fees. So, how will this price war change order flow, and how will it impact regional exchanges and ECNs? |
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 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 |
BusinessWeek May 20, 2010 |
Tricks of the Trade The evolution of men and machines in the stock market. |
Wall Street & Technology May 15, 2006 Cory Levine |
An Industry in Denial Reg NMS is set to change the foundation of the securities industry and represents the reality of a major industrywide spend. But on whose shoulders that expense will fall remains largely up in the air. |
BusinessWeek November 17, 2003 Gary Weiss |
Too Little, Too Late, Mr. Reed? Many feel interim chairman John Reed's NYSE reforms don't go far enough -- so the SEC may step in. |
Wall Street & Technology January 23, 2007 Cory Levine |
NYSE Requests a Four-Week Extension of the Reg NMS Deadline Although it has been beaten to death by industry analysts and press, the importance of the changes to the U.S. securities industry spurred by Reg NMS cannot be overstated. The industry anxiously awaits full implementation of the regulation in 2007. |
BusinessWeek December 22, 2003 Amy Borrus |
Funds: Leaving Little Guys Out In The Cold The SEC's cleanup of mutual funds could shortchange small investors. |
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. |
The Motley Fool February 18, 2004 Bill Mann |
End of the Specialist System? SEC investigations and electronic trading may spell the end of an era. Specialist firms line up to settle with the regulators. |
Wall Street & Technology May 21, 2007 Les Kovach |
Latest Market Data Dispute Over NYSE's Plan to Charge for Depth-of-Book Data Pits NSX Against Other U.S. Exchanges The NYSE filed a comment letter with the SEC supporting a review of the Commission's approval of the NYSE's fee proposal as well as a review of the current market data revenue-sharing formula under Reg NMS. |
BusinessWeek May 20, 2010 Nina Mehta et al. |
The Machines That Ate the Market Once upon a time, human beings oversaw the trading of stocks. They've been replaced by a complex system of computers that can produce a scary new kind of mechanized panic. An investigation into the crash of May 6. |
Wall Street & Technology February 14, 2006 Larry Tabb |
Aggregation: Back to the Future With only two or three trading venues, aggregation is not very interesting. However, with the existence of three major execution venues, and another six or seven regionals and ECNs, in conjunction with an empowered SEC focused on best execution, and now you have a horse race. |
BusinessWeek September 23, 2010 Nina Mehta |
Missing: The Stock Exchange Buyers of Last Resort While increased competition in stock trading has lowered costs, it may have made the markets more vulnerable to rapid price moves. |
Wall Street & Technology October 24, 2007 Michael Topper |
The Repercussion of MiFID and Reg NMS in the U.S. U.S. financial institutions must educate themselves on the difference and similarities between Reg NMS in the States and MiFID in Europe to ensure they know the rules and are able to comply. |
Financial Advisor October 2012 |
Stalled: Tougher Fiduciary Standard For Brokers Even with Wall Street and consumer advocates allied in pushing for it, a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission proposal to raise standards for brokers advising retail investors has run aground. |
BusinessWeek September 13, 2004 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Put The Big Board On The Big Board Why the nation's largest stock exchange should go public. |
Wall Street & Technology March 19, 2007 Cory Levine |
SIFMA and NetCoalition Set Off Market Data Dispute Lobbyists SIFMA and NetCoalition have convinced the SEC to conduct a rare review of market data fees, setting off a spirited debate between exchanges and broker-dealers, such as Charles Schwab. |
CFO October 1, 2011 Sarah Johnson |
Is the SEC Being "Set Up to Fail"? A bill would raise the threshold for how the securities regulator sets rules. |
Wall Street & Technology December 12, 2007 Larry Tabb |
NYSE Specialist Elimination Is Overdue The NYSE specialist may soon be eliminated and replaced with designated market makers. But whether these new market intermediaries are effective and profitable is questionable. |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Dwyer & Thornton |
Mutual Funds Feel The Heat Did they feed information to hedge funds, brokers, and others? |
BusinessWeek December 15, 2003 Paula Dwyer |
Breach Of Trust The mutual-fund scandal was a disaster waiting to happen. An inside look at how the industry manipulated Washington |
BusinessWeek August 16, 2004 Paula Dwyer |
The Big Board's Big Compromise It's making electronic trading easier -- but the NYSE is still a long way from even matching the Chinese-menu array of trading styles offered by electronic rivals. |
BusinessWeek November 10, 2003 Dwyer & Borrus |
The Coming Mutual-Fund Reforms As mutual-fund abuses mount, regulators and lawmakers promise tough new rules. |
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. |
Registered Rep. September 15, 2011 Kristen French |
Schapiro: Republican SEC Reform Bills Could Hog Tie SEC SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said that legislation introduced by Republicans to restructure the agency and its rulemaking process would threaten the agency's ability to write and enforce rules effectively. |
Investment Advisor March 1, 2011 Melanie Waddell |
SEC Fiduciary Rule May Hit by Summer Despite the advisory industry's hopes that the Securities and Exchange Commission would get a quick start on writing a rule to put brokers under the same fiduciary standard as advisors, it looks as though a rulemaking could come by summer. |