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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 May 17, 2006 |
Dipping Into Dark Pools of Liquidity As private crossing networks and related nonquoting sources of liquidity, known as "dark books," vie for market share among block traders, they are creating a highly fragmented market for block trading, according to a new report. |
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 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 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). |
Wall Street & Technology March 19, 2007 |
Finding Liquidity in Derivatives Instruments Is Traders' Biggest Challenge Despite substantial growth in derivatives trading in recent years, much of equity derivatives volume is concentrated in the most-liquid contracts. |
Wall Street & Technology July 1, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
The New Sell-Side Trader: Execution Consultant Brokers are morphing into execution consultants to advise the buy side on selecting algorithms and measuring performance. But how will the sell side reinvent the institutional sales trader? |
Wall Street & Technology January 24, 2006 Jessica Pallay |
The Buy Side Buys In In 2006, it will be impossible to ignore the enhanced productivity gained from algorithmic trading systems. As the buy side takes control of its own trading processes, automated trading frees up humans to focus on more-complex trading decisions. |
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 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 May 29, 2008 Cory Levine |
Latency Risk Exposure On the Rise In 2008, 16 percent of all U.S. institutional equity commissions are exposed to latency risk, totaling $2 billion, according to a new report from the TABB Group. |
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 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 February 17, 2008 Melanie Rodier |
TABB Group Promotes Sussman TABB Group has promoted former senior research analyst Adam Sussman to director of research. |
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 July 1, 2005 Kerry Massaro |
From The Editor: Breaking Up Is Hard to Do Is the relationship coming to an end? Will we be hearing the big "D" word, or is the relationship between financial firms' buy sides and sell sides just maturing and evolving, as all long-standing relationships do? |
Wall Street & Technology January 23, 2007 |
Pondering Liquidity Management The next five years will see a considerable increase in order internalization as market pressures force banking firms to adopt the philosophy of liquidity management in order to stay competitive, a new research note speculates. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Julie Gallagher |
Data Latency Market-data latency has gotten much attention on the sell side, but like so many other industry issues, the buy side is just now playing catch-up. |
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 February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Pre-Trade Analysis Brokers are developing pre-trade analytics in connection with their algorithms to help buy-side customers determine the best algorithms to use. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Algorithmic Trading Buy-side firms are gravitating toward rules-based systems that are often supplied by brokers. These mathematical models analyze every quote and trade in the stock market, identify liquidity opportunities and turn that information into intelligent trading decisions. |
Wall Street & Technology April 15, 2008 Cory Levine |
Quod Releases Solution for Buy-Side Execution Management Advanced Smart-Order Router uses the algorithms in Quod's sell-side solution to bring new levels of routing capabilities to the buy side, the vendor says. |
Wall Street & Technology April 26, 2007 |
Electronic Trading Boom Spurs Spending on Advanced Trading Technology The rapid growth in electronic execution of institutional equities trades will spur U.S. capital markets participants to spend $860 million on advanced trading technology this year, and spending will reach $1.3 billion by 2010, according to a new report. |
Wall Street & Technology November 18, 2005 |
Future Connectivity The financial industry has become dependent on high-speed connectivity to the point that, without it, there would be no markets, payment mechanisms, clearing facility or market data, a report concludes. |
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 February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Direct-Market-Access Trading The buy side is taking more control of its trading decisions while looking for faster, lower-cost and anonymous executions. Direct market access (DMA) tools permit buy-side traders to access liquidity pools and multiple execution venues directly, without intervention from a broker's trading desk. |
Wall Street & Technology November 21, 2006 Nenad Yashruti |
Seeing Is Believing Spending some time trying to figure out the logic and psychology behind an algorithm not only is becoming increasingly important, it is imperative to the success of any trading strategy. |
Bank Technology News November 2004 Shane Kite |
Trading: Direct Execution Players Get Beefy Banks and brokers are stocking up on tech and management tools, bundling direct access with algorithmic trading, as the industry gets more competitive than ever. |
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 |
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 October 29, 2008 Penny Crosman |
U.S. Hedge Funds to Cut IT Spending 40%, to $882 Million New Tabb study finds hedge funds will make drastic IT cutbacks, although more than 75% want to trade multiple asset classes electronically. |
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 January 9, 2006 Larry Tabb |
Seven Trends for '06 Banking and technology trends for the new year: exchange and market infrastructure redesign... the move toward low-touch services... lagging firms will be forced to rebuild their market data infrastructure... etc. |
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 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 April 17, 2008 Melanie Rodier |
TABB Hires Former Amex Executive Miranda Mizen TABB Group appointed Miranda Mizen, who most recently was SVP of transaction services at the American Stock Exchange, as a senior consultant. |
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 April 18, 2005 Mara Der Hovanesian |
Cracking The Street's New Math Algorithmic trades are sweeping the stock market. But how secure are they? |
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 March 14, 2008 Cory Levine |
Excel Still Fastest and Most Flexible Trade Capture System Traders are sticking to Excel because it empowers them to create new structured products without relying on the support of the IT organization, says TABB Group. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2007 |
Demand for Depository Receipts to Stay Strong According to a new report, global market consolidation will not spell the end for the international depository receipt as a financial instrument. |
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 September 18, 2006 Cory Levine |
Selling the Strategy: The Sell Side Finds an Edge in the Algorithm Marketplace by Being Quick and Collaborative Sell-side firms jockeying for position and order flow with algorithmic products are finding that high-end customization and first-mover advantage are playing considerable roles in their clients' decision-making process. |
Wall Street & Technology August 22, 2007 Penny Crosman |
Still Plenty of Job Opportunities in the Capital Markets In spite of trading floor automation, free online trading, and automated research tools, there are still plenty of job opportunities in the capital markets. |
Wall Street & Technology March 14, 2008 Melanie Rodier |
Dark Pools Change Transition Management Transition managers tend to trade large blocks of securities, making anonymity and information leakage important considerations. Strategies are included to leverage dark pools for their full benefit. |
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 November 29, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Want an Algorithm With That? Major brokerage houses are franchising their algorithmic trading strategies to smaller firms that are feeling pressure to offer the service. |
Wall Street & Technology January 6, 2006 Anthony Guerra |
Excellence in Execution Despite the limitations of transaction cost analysis (TCA), most experts agree that trading and TCA now go hand in hand, and the buy-side's growing role in trading means TCA will be important to the sell-side of Wall Street, too. |
Wall Street & Technology September 23, 2005 Jessica Pallay |
Galper Exits TABB Group, Launches Vodia Group Vodia's managing partner says the research and advisory firm's focus will be on corporate development, strategic partnerships, and mergers, acquisitions and divestitures of financial institutions. |