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Institutional Investor (February Issue)

2013/ 02/ 23 by jd in Global News

“For those who build and manage market and trading technologies, 2012 was punctuated by trouble. High-profile system malfunctions marred the BATS Global Markets and Facebook IPOs in March and May, respectively, and brought down market maker Knight Capital Group in August. These too were good new/bad news incidents, not as catastrophic as the still-reverberating ‘flash cash’ of May 6, 2010, but reminders that such technological snafus happen too frequently for comfort. All of this casts a pall over the industry and profession.”

 

New York Times (December 23)

2012/ 12/ 25 by jd in Global News

The proposed acquisitions of NYSE Euronext by IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) and Knight Capital Group by Getco both “reflect the demise of traditional stock-exchange trading. The equities market has been eclipsed by the global market in derivatives, and human traders have been increasingly replaced by computers programmed to profit from split-second price anomalies.” Regulators have not kept pace with this change. “The mergers should remain on the drawing board unless and until regulators can reassure the public that the newly created companies will operate not only for private gain, but in the public interest as well.”

 

Securities Technology Monitor (August 6)

2012/ 08/ 09 by jd in Global News

High frequency trading “can wreak havoc in the global financial marketplace by amplifying moves on the up- and down-sides.” The “Knightmare on Wall Street” focused attention on this issue when a software glitch at Knight Capital caused almost 40 NYSE-listed stocks to move more than 10% in less than 60 minutes. “The problem with the rising popularity of High-Frequency Trading is that it may be distorting global financial markets significantly, increasingly destabilising those markets and causing the rise of systemic risk.”

High frequency trading “can wreak havoc in the global financial marketplace by amplifying moves on the up- and down-sides.” The “Knightmare on Wall Street” focused attention on this issue when a software glitch at Knight Capital caused almost 40 NYSE-listed stocks to move more than 10% in less than 60 minutes. “The problem with the rising popularity of High-Frequency Trading is that it may be distorting global financial markets significantly, increasingly destabilising those markets and causing the rise of systemic risk.”

 

Forbes (August 6)

2012/ 08/ 08 by jd in Global News

“Call it the best disaster and recovery Wall Street has seen in a long time. In less than a week, Knight Capital screwed up royally to the point of near failure and then managed to save itself with the help of outside investors…. If a financial institution is going to mess up then this is the way to do it—without hurting clients and without getting taxpayers involved.”

“Call it the best disaster and recovery Wall Street has seen in a long time. In less than a week, Knight Capital screwed up royally to the point of near failure and then managed to save itself with the help of outside investors…. If a financial institution is going to mess up then this is the way to do it—without hurting clients and without getting taxpayers involved.”

 

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