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Wall Street & Technology August 22, 2005 Maria Wakem |
Spending On Grid Technology To Rise There will be significant growth in the grid market over the next five years, according to a new report. |
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 April 11, 2008 Cory Levine |
Options Traders Lack TCA Tools The structure of the options market has prevented the adoption of transaction cost analysis tools that are now commonplace in equity trading, according to TABB Group. |
Wall Street & Technology August 22, 2007 Larry Tabb |
The Market for Low-Latency Solutions Is Smaller Than Many Realize Until high-speed, low-latency technology becomes easier to acquire, install and integrate, there are going to be many disappointed vendors. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Jessica Pallay |
Lamenting Latency "If buy-side firms want to actively trade and aggressively try to execute on their own behalf, they need tools to compete with the brokers who are sitting on the fattest pipes and have the highest-speed technology," says Larry Tabb, founder and CEO of Westborough, Mass.-based The Tabb Group. |
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 February 18, 2008 Cory Levine |
Stock Exchanges and ECNs Fight for Liquidity The newer and faster electronic connectivity networks are leveraging aggressive pricing models to quickly catch up to their established exchange counterparts. |
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 November 21, 2006 |
Electronic Trading Expectations Soften The buy-side trading desk continues to transform itself into a more electronic, automated and self-directed operation, but the spread of electronic trading is slowing, according to TABB Group. |
Bank Systems & Technology October 14, 2008 Orla O'Sullivan |
Tabb Names Banks Goldman, Morgan Are Likely To Purchase Bank of New York Mellon, State Street and Northern Trust are all likely acquisition candidates for Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley as the two former investment banks begin operating under commercial bank charters. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 Larry Tabb |
Light Speed and The Buttonwood Tree Order routing technology allowed trading desks to be located anywhere. Electronic exchanges enabled not only the matching of orders at increasingly faster speeds, but the development of virtually linked exchanges. |
Wall Street & Technology October 19, 2007 Melanie Rodier |
Asset Flows Move to Hedge Funds, says TABB Group Most fund managers believe the growth of active-extension funds will increase as the pressure for increased yield and increased fees push traditional managers into this new area. |
Wall Street & Technology October 23, 2007 Ivy Schmerken |
Connectivity Booms in Emerging Markets As demand for investing in emerging and frontier markets picks up, buy- and sell-side firms are hunting for networks and trading systems that allow them to operate in foreign markets without necessarily being experts in the local rules themselves. |
Wall Street & Technology February 12, 2007 Cory Levine |
FX Market Fragmentation While large, multinational banks have, in the past, held most of the foreign exchange market, the increasing availability of faster, nontraditional venues has begun to bite into their market share. |
Wall Street & Technology June 2, 2007 Melanie Rodier |
TABB Names Linderman Senior Research Analyst Jeffrey Linderman has joined TABB Group as a senior research analyst. Previously, Linderman was VP and equity derivatives product controller at KBC Alternative Investment Management. |
Wall Street & Technology June 12, 2007 Ivy Schmerken |
OES, Lava Trading Emerge as Dominant Vendors in Order Routing Brokers, exchanges and other vendors are relying on Order Execution Services and Lava Trading for their Reg NMS compliant order routing. But does this pose a risk? |
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 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. |