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Wall Street & Technology October 27, 2003 Anthony Guerra |
All I Want for Christmas ... No longer satisfied with the hand-me-down technology of equities; fixed-income traders are getting order-management systems of their very own. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Brokers Bang on OMS Doors In the race to get their algorithms online and accessible to institutional customers, many brokers are eager to put their logos on the desktops of order-management systems (OMS). |
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. |
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 January 5, 2007 |
Thomson Launches New OMS Thomson Financial pulled the curtain off of its new order management system for asset managers and buy-side traders, TradeCentral. |
Wall Street & Technology February 12, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Buy Side Bets on Bond Platforms Buy-side customers expect TradeWeb and MarketAxess to compete head on in 2004, while both try to solve their STP woes. |
Wall Street & Technology April 27, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Does Bloomberg Have What It Takes? Portfolio managers say Bloomberg should be a bigger force in electronic bond trading. Can it compete against the dealer-owned systems? |
Wall Street & Technology June 22, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Algorithmic Alliances Buy-side firms take a page from the broker-dealers' book, paying to use their algorithmic-trading strategies via partnerships with order-management systems. |
Wall Street & Technology October 23, 2006 Ivy Schmerken |
Buy-Side OMSs Face the EMS Threat Buy-side firms are beginning to question the future of the traditional order management systems. Should it take on more execution functionality or hand off execution to the execution management systems? |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
New Kids on the Block Two new players are offering block-execution systems to buy-side institutions. Can they succeed in a crowded field? |
Wall Street & Technology January 4, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Get With the Program Sell-side desks are giving their buy-side clients access to program-trading tools so they can slice and dice large blocks and measure transaction costs. |
Wall Street & Technology April 22, 2005 |
Capital Markets: Top 10 Strategic Initiatives for 2005 Ten strategic initiatives that will drive technology spending in the capital markets in 2005. |
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 June 22, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Shifting Gears -- People & Careers FPL Taps Houstoun to Co-chair GTC... NYSE Hires Merrill To Catch Violators... Citigroup Promotes Rosengarten... Keeping Tabs... |
Wall Street & Technology April 27, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Hedging the Risk of Instant Messaging While hedge funds enjoy the simplicity of trading via IM networks, compliance and reliability concerns have them seeking IM products with built-in archival systems. |
Wall Street & Technology November 17, 2003 |
Is SwiftNet Fast Enough? Swift has the chance to spread electronic trading around the globe, but not if SwiftNet has an eight-second delay. |
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 August 17, 2007 Richard Jones |
Broker-Neutral OMS/EMS Solution Can Address Rapid Change In Investment Industry The investment industry is experiencing an increasingly rapid pace of change in both the asset classes under management and the way in which they are traded. |
Wall Street & Technology June 22, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Interview A conversation with Robert Gartland, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley, about technology in the financial services industry. |
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 October 28, 2005 Larry Tabb |
Bonds Ain't Stocks Developing real-time fixed-income trading algorithms won't happen soon; but, who said fixed-income algorithmic trading had to look like black-box trading on the equities market? |
Wall Street & Technology June 4, 2004 Jim Middlemiss |
Wall Street's Future Stars Simulated trading rooms are popping up on college campuses, and they're opening recruiting doors on the street. |
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 5, 2004 Larry Tabb |
Data Providers Face Identity Crisis Plagued by declining revenues, the financial data providers seem to be between a rock and a hard place -- hamstrung by increasing competition, an aging infrastructure, an ever-increasing amount of content, and a customer base that wants to pay less. |
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 17, 2003 Ivy Schmerken |
Cleared for Takeoff Clearing firms are rolling out execution services with order-routing and direct-access partners. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Favorite Few Rule E-Bond Trading Seventy-five electronic-trading platforms are competing in the fixed-income market, but a few core systems have most of the volume. |
Wall Street & Technology October 27, 2003 Larry Tabb |
Straight-Through Processing -- Stick a Fork in it, We're Done! We have seamless front-to-back connectivity for many products. We have investors trading thousands of trades per day. Do we need more? |
Wall Street & Technology July 28, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Product Watch Want More Integrated E-Trading?... Displaying Treasury Data in 3-D... Extending the OMS... etc. |
Wall Street & Technology September 23, 2005 Larry Tabb |
To Have and to Hold Should financial firms spend money either to build or acquire client-facing front ends? Or, do firms stay front-end agnostic, partnering with a few select platforms for greater integration, but allow all others to connect via a FIX connection? |
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 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 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 September 25, 2007 Melanie Rodier |
Market for Global Portfolio Systems to Reach $2.67 billion by 2010 Hedge fund growth, the need for risk controls and the increasing use of derivative instruments across a broader population of investment managers are driving the global portfolio systems market, according to a new report. |
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. |
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 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 21, 2007 Melanie Rodier |
Surge In Fixed Income Trading Drives Need For A Single Data Management Platform The recent surge in trading volume products in the U.S. has spurred a need for a single platform that can manage data across asset classes, instruments, and region. |
Registered Rep. May 1, 2004 Ilana Polyak |
Trading Stocks Without the Chatty Cathys Mutual funds have hidden expenses because their large trades can move a stock's price before the transaction is complete. Intermediaries like Liquidnet seek to eliminate the problem. |
Wall Street & Technology February 12, 2004 |
Outlook 2004: Compliance Tops the Charts Never before has Wall Street faced so many new regulations with major technology implications. |
Wall Street & Technology February 5, 2007 Ivy Schmerken |
The Buy Side Jumps on Board the Push to Automate OTC Derivatives Now that traditional buy-side firms and hedge funds are increasingly investing in credit derivatives, the industry is focusing on automating post-trade processes to reduce operational risk. |
Bank Systems & Technology August 4, 2004 Ivan Schneider |
Sibos Preview: SWIFT Readies Quick FIX Banks can plug in to global, real-time light-order entry system. |
Wall Street & Technology June 4, 2004 |
Key Trends in U.S. Securities Key IT trends within the U.S. securities industry currently revolve around the broad concepts of cost reduction, operational efficiency, and compliance and risk management. |
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). |
Bank Technology News May 2001 Daniel Joelson |
Online Trading Craze in Latin America The market goes from hope to fear and back... |
Salon.com July 17, 2000 Heidi Kriz |
Chicks who click Who said day trading was a man's world? In a field long dominated by men, especially young men, the number of female day traders is rising, at least based on anecdotal evidence. |
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? |
BusinessWeek January 26, 2004 Mara Der Hovanesian |
A Pipsqueak Swinging at the Big Board Seth Merrin's Liquidnet is a peer-to-peer swap market geared solely to big traders -- and it's growing rapidly. |
InternetNews April 8, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Thomson Bullish on Trading Technology In its second major buy this year, the financial data giant pays $385M for the maker of Internet-based trading platforms. |
Bank Technology News July 2001 Karen Epper Hoffman |
Is Day Trading Still Hot? You Bet! Celent study says direct access trading is poised for growth... |