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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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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? mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
February 28, 2005
Amy Borrus
Donaldson's Balancing Act The SEC chairman plans further reforms -- mixed with business-friendly flexibility. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wall Street & Technology
June 4, 2004
Ivy Schmerken
Reg NMS: Divided We Stand Unable to define fast versus slow markets, the industry is split over the SEC proposal to amend the trade-through rule. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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)? mark for My Articles similar articles
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? mark for My Articles similar articles
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 mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
November 24, 2003
Paula Dwyer
The Big Board's Blueprint: Done Deal? New York Stock Exchange critics feel shortchanged by interim Chairman John S. Reed's new governance plan, but the SEC is already on board. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
March 6, 2006
Joseph Weber
From Dinosaur To Dynamo? Thanks to CEO John Thain's reforms, the NYSE's future suddenly looks promising. mark for My Articles similar articles
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." mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
August 15, 2005
Kevin Burke
SEC Nabs Brokers for Pirating Squawk Box Info The SEC has charged four brokers and a daytrader with cheating investors through a fraudulent scheme to eavesdrop on confidential order flow information, enabling them to "trade ahead" of large orders at more favorable prices. mark for My Articles similar articles
Financial Advisor
October 2010
Leila B. Boulton
The Fast And The Furious Are high-frequency traders running over investment advisors and their clients? mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
July 1, 2005
Kristen French
On-the-Job Therapy at the SEC After months of trying to fill the position, the SEC has hired a psychologist to work on the commission's flagging morale. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
November 10, 2003
Dwyer & Borrus
The Coming Mutual-Fund Reforms As mutual-fund abuses mount, regulators and lawmakers promise tough new rules. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
July 1, 2004
Elana Varon
Mutual Benefits To regain investor confidence and improve the bottom line, the mutual fund industry needs to integrate transactions up and down the supply chain. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 5, 2004
Paula Dwyer
Mutual Funds: Carpe Diem, Congress The SEC can't restructure the industry by itself, and legislators are dawdling mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 15, 2010
Bill Barker
Why We Oppose 12b-1 Fees This little sales charge doesn't benefit existing shareholders, is insufficiently transparent, and the SEC has a new proposal to limit that fee. mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
June 1, 2005
John Churchill
SEC to Lose Its Head Some say the departure of SEC Chairman William Donaldson, appointed by President George W. Bush to help restore confidence in scandal-ridden markets, can't result in anything positive for the Commission's agenda in the near future. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
May 20, 2010
This Cop's Beat Is Wall Street George Canellos left private practice 10 months ago to take over the New York office of the Securities & Exchange Commission mark for My Articles similar articles
U.S. Banker
December 2004
Lee Conrad
Compliance: Hedge Fund Registration Sparks Broad Criticism The Securities and Exchange Commission's decision to register most of the estimated 8,350 hedge funds is drawing heavy criticism from the business community and some government officials. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
December 1, 2003
Borrus & Dwyer
The Critical Battle For Fund Reform Big investors, Congress, the SEC -- they're all swooping in to curb widespread abuses in the mutual-fund industry. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 2, 2004
Shannon Zimmerman
SEC: Toothless No More? Is the SEC getting serious about fund industry reform? mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
February 22, 2005
Will Leitch
SEC's Roye Out as Mutual Fund Head In a move that casts doubt on the future of mutual fund regulation, the SEC has announced that its chief mutual funds legislator, Paul Roye, will step down, effective immediately. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
August 9, 2004
Amy Borrus
At The SEC, The Agony Of Compromise Chairman Donaldson is finding a deal on proxy reform elusive in an election year. Yet, despite competing pressures, his resolve shows no sign of waning. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
August 30, 2004
Amy Borrus
Brokers Aren't Advisers The line between brokers and advisers was clear for decades. But in 1999, the Securities & Exchange Commission blurred that line. Now, to protect investors, the SEC must redraw a clear line. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 2, 2009
Robert Brokamp
Let's Fix the Rules of Enforcement Is the SEC up to the task? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 20, 2010
Alyce Lomax
Will the SEC Protect Proxy Access? Investors of all stripes should keep an eye on next week's ruling. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
November 1, 2011
Vincent Ryan
Follow the Bouncing Stock Equity markets are more volatile than ever, and many observers say high-frequency trading is the reason. mark for My Articles similar articles
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 mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
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. mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
March 21, 2006
Halah Touryalai
SEC and U.S. Attorney's Office Indict Traders and Executives in `Squawk Box' Scheme The SEC alleges that the fraudulent scheme allowed daytraders to trade based on overheard customer orders. mark for My Articles similar articles
Registered Rep.
June 24, 2009
John Churchill
SEC Says Time To Tighten Rules On Money Market Funds After one of the oldest and largest money market funds suffered such severe redemptions that the net asset value of its shares fell below $1, the SEC is proposing structural and regulatory changes for money markets mark for My Articles similar articles
Investment Advisor
November 2009
Melanie Waddell
SEC Sets Out Strategic Plan The Securities and Exchange Commission publishes its Draft Strategic Plan outlining the Commission's strategic goals for 2010 through 2015. mark for My Articles similar articles