Sunday, November 29, 2009

AMCF News: LSE outage, NASDAQ, US policy, S&P, cheques, Wedding Cake Island


LSE results and outage take the headlines. I see no shame in asking to make markets better. Allowing the free flow of liquidity is exactly what nature intended. Using the auction process to dupe smart order routing into locking liquidity might work once, but the cats is now out of the bag. Technology will adapt.
Nasdaq developments in OTC clearing and looks like EACH is growing beyond its initial name. More ACH.
Some laughable US policy being espoused.
And S&P…can you really take them seriously?

Farewell the cheque…but then again.

Working With Idiots Can Kill You!
http://bigmacky.wordpress.com/2007/08/29/working-with-idiots-can-kill-you/
*** an excellent article on TCA. Must say, “Global Cooling Is An Ecological Disaster —On Pluto!” is also of concern.

Another great swim this w/end. The wedding Cake Island swim. Out from Coogee beach and around the island.
“The bottom around Wedding Cake is littered with rounded boulders on the inside, and with forests of weed and rock shelfs on the ocean side. There's a lot of sea life down there”
More here.
http://www.oceanswims.com/nsw90/coogee09.html

Results already in at:
http://www.oceanswims.com/results90/coogeeres092.html
A time of 45:15 or 69/147 in age and 393/851 in the mens.


You can see the island here:
http://maps.google.com.au/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=coogee+surf+life+saving+club&daddr=-33.927605,151.261353&geocode=FUJg-v0d9QIECSG01VQJHmHacA%3B&hl=en&mra=dme&mrcr=0&mrsp=1&sz=16&dirflg=w&sll=-33.923848,151.260259&sspn=0.012464,0.01457&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=16

Dawny results in:
http://www.oceanswims.com/results90/dawnyres09long.html
No. 139 a solid boofheads 44mins.

And as for those Wallabies. May the best team win. I’ll not be upset if Wales win, but I’ll support the Wallabies so there is someone to ridicule in the pubs!

Now…cricket..there’s a game.

Great w/end all,

S
http://clearingandsettlement.blogspot.com/

If a cluttered desk is the sign of a cluttered mind, what is the significance of a clean desk?"
--
Dr. Laurence J. Peter, Canadian educator


Platforms

Chi-X Europe Said Likely to Name Alasdair Haynes as New CEOBy Nandini SukumarNov. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Alasdair Haynes may be named chief executive officer of Chi-X Europe Ltd., the region's biggest alternative trading system, according to three people familiar with the situation.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601102&sid=atLtwQaDZxjQ

FT TRADING ROOM: Interview Transcript – Mark Howarth and Hirander MisraBy Jeremy Grant11/23/09Transcript of interview with Mark Howarth, interim chief executive of Chi-X Europe, and Hirander Misra, chief operating officer, with Jeremy Grant, Editor, FT Trading Room.FT: I think a lot of people would be surprised to know that you almost have 25 per cent of the FTSE 100, two and a half years after launch. Put that together with the share that you have on continental Europe and you are, give or take, fourth largest trading platform in Europe. Is that where you expected to be?....

Majority of Europe's dark-equities market shifts to MTFsIn the month through Thursday, Chi-X Europe, BATS Europe and Turquoise dealt with a combined 54% of trades in Europe's market of dark equities. The multilateral trading facilities started operating dark pools in May. Liquidnet Europe, Nyfix Euro Millennium and ITG Posit controlled 98% of the market then. Since then, the three established dark pools have seen their market share dwindle to 39%, according to Thomson Reuters. The Wall Street Journal/Financial News (22 Nov.)

London Stock Exchange says profits plungeLONDON (AFP) The London Stock Exchange announced on Wednesday that six-month net profits nosedived by almost 40 percent, as a result of depressed markets and increasing competition.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20091125/bs_afp/britainmarketsstockscompanyearningslse_20091125094526

26/11/2009 12:27:00
GREMLINS STRIKE AGAIN AT LSE AS SHARE PRICE PLUMMETS OVER DUBAI FEARS
The London Stock Exchange is once again grappling with technical problems on a day when its shares have taken a hammering on fears that Borse Dubai may be forced to dump its 20% stake in the UK market.
More on this story:
http://www.finextra.com/news/fullstory.aspx?newsitemid=20798
*** Xavier Rolet, CEO of the London Stock Exchange, said: "We regret the inconvenience that today's disruption to trading has caused for our clients. Having resolved the immediate issue, we are working hard to ensure this doesn't happen again ahead of switching to MillenniumIT's trading platform next year."



NASDAQ OMX Baltic Creates A Single Marketplace - A New Trading Venue For Shares Listed On Three Existing ExchangesNASDAQ OMX Baltic, part of the NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:NDAQ), today announced its intention to create a new single marketplace to trade shares listed on the regulated markets NASDAQ OMX Tallinn, NASDAQ OMX Riga and NASDAQ OMX Vilnius. The Euro will be the trading and settlement currency for the marketplace scheduled to launch in the first half of 2010, subject to member readiness and necessary approval from local authorities.
http://www.exchange-handbook.co.uk/index.cfm?section=news&action=detail&id=86836NASDAQ OMX Acquires Shares In Baltic Exchanges - Move To Improve Ability To Develop More Liquid Baltic Capital MarketsNASDAQ OMX Nordic, part of The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:NDAQ), has agreed with Swedbank and SEB to acquire their minority stakes in the NASDAQ OMX Tallinn exchange. At the same time, other local minority shareholders have also sold their stakes in NASDAQ OMX Tallinn to NASDAQ OMX, bringing NASDAQ OMX's ownership in NASDAQ OMX Tallinn to 93 percent. In connection with this deal, SEB has also sold its 1.2 percent stake in NASDAQ OMX Vilnius to NASDAQ OMX. NASDAQ OMX's goal is to reach 100 percent ownership in all NASDAQ OMX's Baltic entities in the near future. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. http://www.exchange-handbook.co.uk/index.cfm?section=news&action=detail&id=86838


Treasury battle: ELX takes on NYSE CHRISTINE BIRKNERTwo rival exchanges in the Treasury futures space could be set for a battle on the regulation front. On Oct. 13, NYSE Euronext and the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) finalized their formal agreement to create a joint venture, New York Portfolio Clearing (NYPC), to clear interest rate products traded on NYSE Liffe U.S. NYPC would margin cash and derivatives markets in a single pot, rather than through existing cross-margining agreements. ELX, which launched trading of U.S. Treasury futures in July, sent a letter to the SEC on Oct. 28 objecting to NYSE's filing of draft amendments to approve the venture. ELX says that filing the venture in a draft manner was an attempt to keep ELX or other exchanges from having a public opportunity to submit any objections to the SEC. ELX's main objection is that the venture is anti-competitive.
http://www.futuresmag.com/Issues/2009/December-2009/Pages/ELX-takes-on-NYSE.aspx

innerExchange releases inExFlexinnerExchange has announced the release of inExFlex, version 3.0 of its exchange platform solution, a FIX native trading infrastructure for the OTC markets The company states that the technology move from the traditional exchange model to new business agile exchanges and marketplaces is underway, and innerExchange will support the move. New electronic exchanges and internet driven marketplaces can bring huge advantages for distribution, flexibility and lower cost. inExFlex, operates a trading p..
http://www.automatedtrader.net/news/exchange-news/24596/innerexchange-releases-inexflex

ASX futures fail to trade Australian securities exchange operator ASX's plans to take a lead in the renewable energy market stalled yesterday when a new futures contract failed to trade after listing for the first time.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/market-data/3094970/ASX-futures-fail-to-trade

Turkish bourse to use Aleri for trading surveillance




Clearing


Burgundy appoints second CCP
Thu, 2009-11-19 16:58
Burgundy, a multilateral trading facility specialising in Nordic stocks, has chosen Swiss clearing house SIX x-clear as its second provider of central counterparty (CCP) clearing.
SIX x-clear will join pan-European clearing house European Multilateral Clearing Facility (EMCF), which has cleared trades on Burgundy since the platform launched its CCP service on 9 October. Burgundy expects to add SIX x-clear to the service in the second quarter of 2010, pending final agreement between the relevant parties and approval of interoperability agreements by the relevant European regulators.
http://www.thetradenews.com/asset-classes/equities/3907

Nasdaq OMX (Clearing)
OTC Derivatives System Debuts with Razor Edge on Competition
http://www.windowsfs.com/capital-markets/otc-derivatives-system-debuts-with-razor-edge-on-competition

also:
http://www.idcg.com/idcg/press.html
http://www.idcg.com/pdfs/idcg/IDCG%20Educational%20Brochure.pdf
http://www.efinancialnews.com/homepage/content/1055665918/


NATIONAL CLEARING CENTRE JOINS EACH
http://www.finextra.com/news/announcement.aspx?pressreleaseid=31215




Policy

Market participants are fiercely divided on whether the US Securities and Exchange Commission should follow through on its proposal to ban 'flash' orders in the US equities and options markets, according to responses submitted during the comment period, which closed on Monday.
Read story
http://www.thetradenews.com/regions/americas/3930

Dark Pools Seek Limited TransparencyDark pools provide institutional investors with a valuable venue for trading large blocks of securities. ...
http://wallstreetandtech.com/trading-technology/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=221600329&cid=nl_wallstreettech_daily



Senator Kaufman Calls for End to Sponsored AccessSenator Ted Kaufman (D-DE) has delivered a letter to SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro and four commissioners urging them to end sponsored access and "combat manipulative high frequency trading algorithms.”
*** hopeless.

Democrats push $150B stock tax on Wall StreetBy Silla BrushA House bill still being drafted aims to raise $150 billion each year to pay for new jobs. Under a bill being drafted by Democratic Reps. Peter DeFazio (Ore.) and Ed Perlmutter (Colo.), the sale and purchase of financial instruments such as stocks, options, derivatives and futures would face a 0.25 percent tax.
http://thehill.com/homenews/house/69295-dems-push-wall-street-150b-stock-tax
**** Ummm, even more hopeless.


PAYPAL FOUND IN BREACH OF AUSTRALIAN ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING RULES Australian financial crime regulator Austrac has given PayPal a one-year deadline to tighten up its procedures for managing money laundering and terrorism financing risks, after finding the firm in breach of the country's AML laws.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/news/fullstory.aspx?newsitemid=20781
*** Not only does Austrac exist, it bites!

Many banks are still unsafeStandard & Poor's gives warning that nearly all of the world's big banks lack sufficient capital.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/6638922/Most-global-banks-are-still-unsafe-warns-SandP.html
*** Amazing, one GFC and all of a sudden S&P comes out with a revelation.
[in 2008 the rating agencies had 20 organisations rated at AAA and…64,000, yep sixty four thousand structured products rated AAA.
http://clearingandsettlement.blogspot.com/2009/06/amcf-news-chi-x-jb3-elx-stakeholders-db.html]

****
Given the key role the ratings agencies played in creating the global financial crisis with their risk-modelling and rating of cancerous sub-prime mortgages that were sliced and diced into complex securitised bundles, of course, no one should take pronouncements on creditworthiness from these newly conservative agencies too seriously.
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/SP-NAB-ANZ-Commonwealth-Bank-CBA-banks-capital-pd20091125-Y5A7Y?OpenDocument&src=kgb
*** hear, hear!



FSA raps Nomura for inadequate derivatives valuation
http://www.thetradenews.com/asset-classes/derivatives/3925
*** I hate this “double dipping”. You self disclose (take a P/L hit) and then you get a rap on the knuckles too. Do the auditors get a fine too…or are they too hard to go after. My son lost his DS once. (nicked from the poolside on vacation – he was careless). I was upset, he was distraught. I made him save for a new one…but I didn’t lump him with a fine too.





UK BANKS SET TO VOTE ON ABOLITION OF CHEQUES The UK's major banks are set to vote next month on whether to stop clearing cheques as consumers increasingly turn to cards and electronic transfers.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/news/fullstory.aspx?newsitemid=20780
*** not if, but when

$9 BILLION Check That Saved Morgan Stanley: Is It The Biggest Check Ever? (PHOTO)Ever wondered what a $9 billion check looks like?
http://bit.ly/4UtrV1
*** but then again, cheques do come in handy in a tight spot.


Advertisement In A Long Island Shop: Guitar, for sale. Cheap. No strings attached.On a bulletin board: Success Is Relative. The more The Success, The more The Relatives.You Know Your kids Have Grown Up When: Your Daughter Begins To Put On Lipstick.. Or when your Son starts To wipe It Off.Sign In A Bar: ‘Those Of You Who Are Drinking To Forget, Please do Pay In Advance.’Sign In Driving School: If Your Wife Wants To Learn To Drive, Don’t Stand In Her Way.Behind Every Great Man, There Is A Surprised Woman.The Reason Men Lie Is Because Women Ask too Many Questions.Getting Caught Is The Mother Of Invention.Laugh And The World Laughs With You, Snore And You sleep Alone.The Surest Sign That Intelligent Life Exists Elsewhere In The UniverseIs The Fact That It Has Never Tried To Contact Us



Scott Riley
Business Development

[Please note my new email address:
scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com]

Fortis Global Clearing
8th Floor 50 Bridge Street Sydney Australia 2000
((Off)+61 (0)2 8916 9634 È(Mob): +61 (0)418 117 627
*
scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com

Monday, November 23, 2009

AMCF News: Chi-X, mutuals, regulation, JPM, Fortis, Cockatoo island


Chi-East announces partnership with LCH for non-displayed trading.
Chi-X Europe continues building the network effect. IG Group connects to Chi-X Europe. Even after 2 years there is still far to go.
Competition in the Canadian market continues to open up (fragment). On the blog site I've also included some surreal video clip supposedly from TSE. I can only assume it is a viral type of thing. Hardly an exchange worthy message...but then again, it is Canadian so who knows what those crazy Canooks are up to.
DB spends big on new platform.
LSE adds bonds (as a humble retail investor I always found bonds, other than Gilt auctions, inaccessible due to size, so I like this).

The policy proposal that infrastructures should lose their mutual aspect leaves me dumbfound.
It just shows how far politics can disconnect from the reality of industry.
I’d like to rant a bit on this topic but I just don’t know where to begin.

CDS. Funny. Conflicting viewpoints on market. Must be a timing difference.

Regulatory policy again.
On short selling I absolutely agree with Zimmerhansl. Regulation for regulations sake loses its meaning.
With One.Tel. No doubt, the company was a poor one that left millions outstanding to creditors. There are no angels in this mix, but there is something wrong about having to spend 15mill to defend yourself.

Busy week for JPM. Cazanove and ANZ!
More details on Fortis.

And finally… the ocean swimming season kicked off here in NSW last week-end.
On a day where temperatures got over 40C it was a good day to be swimming.
I’d never been to the Dawn Fraser pool (a tidal pool in the harbour) nor swum around cockatoo island so this was all new.
I tested the water in the Dawny and was surprised to see a jelly fish, geeze those things get about.
As for the water temp. lovely, circa 24 C. Given this is in the harbour I was surprised how warm it was.
The water is much choppier to the East of the harbour bridge but there are still strong currents running here as you round the island.
This was a great journey swim, in a clockwise direction, with great views of a historic part of Sydney.
We set off from Balmain, swim across to the island, round it, then back to “Dawny’s”

There is a great write up / report here.
http://www.oceanswims.com/nsw90/09112122.html

You can see the island here:
http://maps.google.com.au/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=cockatoo+island+sydney&sll=-25.335448,135.745076&sspn=53.947846,59.677734&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Cockatoo+Island,+New+South+Wales&t=h&z=14

I was glad I did the swim rather than watch the rugby.
What muppets. Aust lost to Scotland, first time in 27yrs.
Well, so much for dreams of a grand slam…it’s now called the grand sham.
If they follow their lose one, win one form I feel sorry for Wales.
I now throwing the baby out with the bath water. I’d rather see Wales win and play with passion than watch these wallabies win on the basis of I don’t know what. I feel sorry for Deans and Robinson, but as a unit, this is not a professional side.
Perhaps we can learn from the English:

However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results."
--
Winston Churchill, British prime minister

Have a great week all.


S
http://clearingandsettlement.blogspot.com/


Platforms

Chi-East, a joint venture between trading venue operator Chi-X Global and the Singapore Exchange , has appointed LCH.Clearnet as the central clearing facility for its pan-Asian, non-displayed trading platform, scheduled to launch in mid-2010.
Read story
http://www.thetradenews.com/trading-venues/dark-pools/3897

TradeTech Asia 2009 Highlights
TradeTech Asia 2009 came to a close in Singapore on November 19. The 2 day cash equities powwow featured many prominent minds of the electronic trading industry. Panels, roundtables and presentations covered a wide range of topics including...
Read More Here

Spread better IG Group connects to Chi-X EuropeSign of increasing importance of alternative trading platforms to investors
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4cc93b9a-d2d9-11de-af63-00144feabdc0.html

MTFS CAPTURE 54% OF EUROPE’S DARK MARKET A trio of alternative trading systems has seized more than half of Europe’s “dark” equities market from broker-run rivals in just six months.
http://mail.efnmail.co.uk/r/155027663/MjU3MzA2OjIzMjYz/
*** Chi-X, T and Bats.

Trader plans electronic OTC platform for convertible bondsConstantinos Antoniades, formerly a bond trader at Goldman Sachs, is poised to launch Vega-Chi, the first electronic over-the-counter platform for convertible bonds in Europe. Vega-Chi will list 165 of the 180 convertible-bond issues in Europe and will soon add Asian convertibles. The platform is another attempt at getting into Europe's fragmented market, which is dominated by banks. "Currently, the convertible-bond market is extremely fragmented and very inefficient, and what we want to create is a kind of centralised system where investors can access liquidity better and can trade better prices than are available in the OTC market," Antoniades said. Financial Times (tiered subscription model) (20 Nov.)
*** Geeze, everyone wants Chi in their name now.


Deutsche Börse spends big on new trading platform Deutsche Börse is throwing significant resources behind a bold plan to move all of its US and European markets onto a single high-speed trading platform. The move mirrors its biggest rivals, which are simplifying their technology in the battle to lure speed-sensitive traders.

LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE TO LAUNCH RETAIL BONDS PLATFORM The London Stock Exchange is to launch a new order-driven trading service for private investors in the bond markets.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/news/fullstory.aspx?newsitemid=20762


NASDAQ OMX and the Nordic Securities Dealers Associations Update Timetable for Migration to New Trading PlatformSTOCKHOLM, Sweden, Nov 16, 2009 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX News Network) -- NASDAQ OMX, the Danish Securities Dealers Association, the Federation of Finnish Financial Services and the Swedish Securities Dealers Association, have together agreed on an updated timetable for the migration to a new trading platform on the NASDAQ OMX exchanges in Copenhagen, Helsinki, Iceland, Riga, Stockholm, Tallinn and Vilnius.
http://ir.nasdaq.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=424295
**** Based on the updated timetable, the new trading platform, INET, will be introduced on February 8, 2010

Technology Drives Trading CostsTrading costs spiked during the volatile year that was, but experts see calmer — and cheaper — waters surfacing, according to Elkins/McSherry's 13th annual transaction cost survey. Fast-­paced technological change remains the driving force in equity trading.
*** US centric

THE TRADE NEWS: BlocSec Scraps Minimum Size RequirementsBy Staff11/16/09BlocSec, a pan-Asian non-displayed trading system owned by agency brokerage CLSA Asia-Pacific markets, is to remove its minimum order size requirements in a bid to attract greater liquidity to its platform.

US FUTURES MARKETS IN CROSSHAIRS OF ALGO REVOLUTION - TABB The US futures markets is set to be the next battleground for high frequency traders, as rapid uptake of algorithmic strategies leads to a surge in the proportion of volume traded on an automated basis, according to Tabb Group.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/news/fullstory.aspx?newsitemid=20748
*** and ELX will be well positioned to cater for this shift.

REUTERS: Turquoise Owners Might Hold onto Stake, According to COOBy Tyler Sitte and Daisy Ku11/17/09The chief operating officer of Turquoise said its founding members may keep a strategic stake in the multilateral trading platform should it be sold."As I understand it, the member banks want to keep a strategic stake, suggesting that they would stay committed to continuing to provide liquidity," COO Adrian Farnham.




Clearing

Debate on derivatives, clearinghouses continuesDerivatives have been the focus of regulatory debate lately, but they remain a useful tool, said Nobel economist Myron Scholes. Banning them would be a "Luddite response that takes financial markets back decades," Scholes said. Regulators think trading derivatives through clearinghouses would make them safer, but doing so would hurt banks' profit and make certain corporate hedging prohibitively expensive. The Economist (11/12)

ICE chief sees tenfold rise in CDS tradesThe market for credit default swaps is likely to grow tenfold and overtake the larger interest rate swap market, as asset managers realise the benefits of the instruments in curbing risk, according to the head of US derivatives market IntercontinentalExchange.
http://www.efinancialnews.com/homepage/content/1055748538

CDS market has become a shadow of its former self Broker GFI’s monthly credit derivatives report used to create a stir in the market. The report, which charts trading patterns in the most active sectors and single-name credits in the global credit default swap market, contained some diverting information this month.

UK regulators could gain authority to tear up bankers' contractsThe government of UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown will outline plans for reining in bankers' compensation deemed as encouraging excessive risk-taking. The Financial Services Authority would be given "powers if necessary to tear up contracts that would result in payments being made that would cause instability", said Chancellor Alistair Darling. The legislation would not apply to 2009 bonuses, however. Bloomberg (15 Nov.) , The Wall Street Journal (16 Nov.) , The Times (London) (16 Nov.)


Regional


SGX raps banks on 'dark pools'By Sundeep Tucker and Kevin Brown in SingaporeTension between exchanges and banks over the role of "dark pools" in the markets looks set to spread to Asia after SGX, the Singapore exchange, criticised the banks' dark pools as "opaque" systems that prevented investors from seeing prices.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/6e86a2f2-d24f-11de-a0f0-00144feabdc0.html
*** the distinction between exchange and bank operated dark pools.

SHANGHAI STOCK EXCHANGE SWITCHES TO NEW TRADING SYSTEM
http://www.finextra.com/news/announcement.aspx?pressreleaseid=31016


Policy

NYSE, LCH.Clearnet Urge U.S. to Drop Clearing Ownership LimitsBy
Matthew LeisingNov. 19 (Bloomberg) -- NYSE Euronext and four other firms are asking Congress to drop a proposal that would bar clearing and trading systems in the private derivatives market offered by companies that are more than 20 percent bank owned. Congress shouldn't adopt rigid ownership caps, the companies, which also include Tradeweb LLC, LCH.Clearnet Ltd., FXall and Bats Global Markets Inc., said in a Nov. 16 letter sent to Representatives Barney Frank and Spencer Bachus. Frank, chairman of the Financial Services Committee, plans to include the proposal when his bill to overhaul the $605 trillion market reaches the House floor.http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=a_pF4X829rK8


Short Selling in Aust.
Australia remains one of the less hospitable places for short selling and securities lending. One of the key requirements placed on traders is that short sales must be disclosed when the order is placed and the exchange releases daily statistics on short sales. I always wonder what this type of information is meant to convey. I maintain that information without context is meaningless. Lets look at the Aussie data….
http://www.stocklendingtoday.com/my_weblog/2009/11/ive-mentioned-before-the-dramatic-levelling-of-the-playing-field-in-prime-brokerage-new-entrants-new-alliances-and-produ.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+SecuritiesLendingTradersNetwork+%28Stock+Lending+Today%29
*** I totally agree with Roy… Rules meant to protect investors that can’t actually be used by them represent unnecessary regulatory interference.




One.Tel
I’m far from knowing the in and outs and rights and wrongs of this…however it does look like if you have 15 million dollars and 5 years …you can defend your “innocence” (it almost justifies obscene pay for directors). Two other directors, without these resources, settled out of court (with substantial bans) in 2004. Somewhere, there is an injustice.
http://www.smh.com.au/business/onetel-shock-asic-loses-case-against-jodee-rich-20091118-iljc.html
http://www.asic.gov.au/asic/asic.nsf/byheadline/09-229MR+ASIC+proceedings+against+Rich+and+Silbermann+dismissed?openDocument


JPMorgan seals 1bn takeover of Cazenove.The London stockbroker that counts the Queen as a customer has been taken over by JPMorgan in a 1bn deal that will deliver a windfall to staff.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/6604248/JPMorgan-seals-1bn-takeover-of-Cazenove.html

J.P. Morgan buys $99bn ANZ custody services
J.P. Morgan's Worldwide Securities Services division has bought ANZ's Custodian Services business - a move that boosts J.P. Morgan's assets under custody by a cool $99 billion and gives it a substantial foothold in the local sub-custody sector.
Read more »



ABN Amro, Fortis Bank Bailout Rises to $45 Billion on Merger Preparations The Netherlands plans to invest an additional 3 billion euros ($4.5 billion) of cash in ABN Amro Holding NV's Dutch unit and Fortis Bank Nederland NV as the government merges the two bailed out lenders.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aPIB7xQhsGFQ

http://www.minfin.nl/english/News/Newsreleases/2009/11/Government_clears_the_way_for_integration_of_ABN_AMRO_and_Fortis_Bank_Nederland
*** the official line from finance minister.


Icap's clear skiesBy Emiko TerazonoAfter dropping plans to buy clearing house LCH.Clearnet, Icap, founded and headed by Tory treasurer Michael Spencer , has quietly made two appointments highlighting how the interdealer broker is focusing its attention on the unglamorous post-trade side of the over-the-counter derivatives business. It comes as regulators are pushing for greater use of processes such as clearing.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/952c3414-d3e2-11de-8caf-00144feabdc0.html

S.I.N. Alert: Tradeweb Takes on Icap in Inter-Dealer Agency Bond Trading
By Shane Kite
Tradeweb launched inter-dealer electronic trading in federal agency debt Thursday on Dealerweb, with the goal of taking the bulk of the market from Icap, the world’s largest inter-dealer broker, said an executive at a fixed income services provider with knowledge of the initiative.
Dealerweb is an inter-dealer electronic trading platform operated by Hilliard Farber & Co., a boutique inter-dealer brokerage specializing in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and owned by Tradeweb.
Tradeweb
purchased Hilliard a year ago as a means of entering the inter-dealer business enabled through Hilliard’s existing dealer clients. Hilliard was primarily a voice broker and Tradeweb provided Hilliard’s dealer-customers with an alternative: electronic, inter-dealer trading.


http://instinet.com/includes/index.jsp?thePage=/AboutInstinet/profiles/40thdocumentary.html
*** A 40yr snap shot of Instinet.

WFE Oct 2009 figures
http://www.world-exchanges.org/files/focus/pdf/focus%201109.pdf

EUROPEAN COMMISSION ACCUSES S&P OF MONOPOLY ABUSE OVER ISIN FEES The European Commission has accused Standard & Poor's of unfair pricing of fees charged for stock data codes and abusing its dominant position as the sole-appointed National Numbering Agency (NNA) for US International Securities Identification Numbers (Isins).
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/news/fullstory.aspx?newsitemid=20768




Female Hedge Fund Managers Outperform Male Counterparts From January 2000 through May 31, 2009, women who ran hedge funds delivered nearly double the investment performance of their male counterparts, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research.


"Thor" Movie Update: Warriors Three Cast Who's playing Fandral, Hogun and Volstagg? Find out now!
When
Thor makes his big screen debut on May 20, 2011

O'Driscoll late show ends Wallabies' grand slam dream
The Wallabies' grand slam dream is over…
Oh well, I guess a draw does not a grand slam make.




Scott Riley
Business Development

[Please note my new email address:
scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com]

Fortis Global Clearing
8th Floor 50 Bridge Street Sydney Australia 2000
((Off)+61 (0)2 8916 9634 È(Mob): +61 (0)418 117 627
*
scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com

Sunday, November 15, 2009

AMCF News: European primaries, dark eqyptians, CCPs in Europe, Asia, The Wall & Rememberance


G’day All,

Landscape still shifting in Europe. Competition continues to take a foothold. The observation of the liquidity shift(s) during the latest outages at the primary markets confirm this. Yet we also continue to see increases in the valuations of the primaries. Personally, I think water will always find its own level and a finger in the European dyke of primary markets ain’t gunna help much longer.

Recommend the Traders Magazine article on “What’s in a name” and Egyptians killing pigs (for those that like the dark).

I’m less keen on “rules” to prevent clearing house failures. A the moment we all have very clear procedures and guidelines. I think the important context is models can be different but the level playing field should be based on the assumptions used. How we calibrate risk defences can vary, but all should be providing the same integrity of defence.

LCH.Clearnet ownership changes I believe are just the start of a new journey. The user community, though now greater concentrated, still has a lot of “herding” of its own members interests to do.
Figures out on EuroCCP (10myn loss) and CME seeks to enter the fray.
Very perplexed at the Euroclear UK positioning. If they were talking about their efforts to add transparency to pricing, I’d be applauding them (e.g. stamp duty, netting fees, etc.), instead they focus on why they should not be expected to provide competitive pricing.

I’m a believer in securitisation. No doubt there will be some good deals out there now to reassure investors to return to those turbulent waters. I don’t think 5% is enough to eat of what you kill, but I also think holding capital for risks you’ve sold is not right. I don’t think the right balance has yet been struck.

Good Asian round up in The Banker.

An important week for dates.
Remembrance day on 11th Nov. Happy to see the main street of Sydney fall silent. Very visible profile “in the city” yet it becomes ever easier to “forget” those that sacrificed so much for what we have today.
Also staggered by the importance of 9th Nov. What an important date for Germany, not least because of the wall.

And sport, sorry, a Grand Slam tour in progress and I forgot to mention it.
Yes, a win against England. I was not optimistic at 9-Nil and Johnny kicking well. Anyway, we dragged ourselves through to the win and I thought we still look poor at closing (was I alone in thinking England could have been better defensively?). Anyway, we need well crafted tries just as much as we need soft ones.
This week Ireland at Croke Park. I’ll go for the Aussies to win. In fact, I’m calling an Aussie grand slam…but hey, I’m parochial.
*** overcome by events, this came out evens. A fair result I suspect. I’ve not seen the game yet. I wonder, does this mean they can still claim a Grand Slam? (is the definition “undefeated” or “all conquering”?)

It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it."
--Aristotle,
Greek philosopher

Have a great week all,


S
http://clearingandsettlement.blogspot.com/

(Cartoon is KAL from economist)


Platforms
LSE to launch dark orders
The London Stock Exchange is attempting to reverse the tide that has seen its dominance of UK equity trading undermined this year, by introducing next month a new dark order type and changing its fee structure.

LSE sets new date for hidden orders, amends fees
http://www.thetradenews.com/asset-classes/equities/3844

SIX targets high-volume members with fee cuts
Chi-X Europe to cut dark fees until year-end
ConvergEx snaps up Millennium dark pool
LSE's grip on price formation weakened by latest outage
Trading on pan-European multilateral trading facility Chi-X Europe increased during the London Stock Exchange's partial outage on Monday afternoon, indicating that European traders' dependence on primary market prices is waning
http://www.thetradenews.com/asset-classes/equities/3881

London Bourse Delays Baikal Launch on Turquoise Talks, WSJ Says
By Patrick Rial and Jackie Cohen
Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- London Stock Exchange Group Plc has postponed the launch of its dark-pool trading system Baikal as it negotiates a possible purchase of rival Turquoise, the Wall Street Journal reported.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601084&sid=aNnKuGiPRjk4

Deutsche Börse becomes the last of the major European exchanges to launch dedicated pan-European trading capabilities today with the launch of Xetra International Market.
Read the interview
(more worthwhile – contains XIM pricing)
[0.06bps = 6 euro cents per 10K]


09/11/2009 16:16:00
CONVERGEX TO ACQUIRE NYFIX US TRANSACTION SERVICES BUSINESS
Bank of New York-owned ConvergEx has agreed to acquire the US electronic agency execution business of Nyfix Transaction Services, comprising the Millennium Alternative Trading System (ATS) and its direct market access (DMA) and algorithmic products.
More on this story: http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20715

Listed Exchanges Grow 27 Per Cent Year-On-Year
The share values of the world's listed exchanges experienced year-on-year growth of 27.5 per cent, despite losing four per cent in value during October 2009, according to the Mondo Visione Exchanges Index.
http://www.exchange-handbook.co.uk/index.cfm?section=news&action=detail&id=86748



Clearing

ICE seeks rules to prevent clearing house failures
By Jane Baird
LONDON, Nov 12 (Reuters) - IntercontinentalExchange Inc. called on regulators to set standards for the margins that central clearing houses must set aside to guard against collapse in the more than $600 trillion derivatives market.
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/afx/2009/11/12/afx7116334.html
**** 'The models don't have to be the same, but they should be operated on the same assumption set. If you run a model based on the collapse of only one dealer and liquidation within two days, you get a very different result in orders of magnitude in the margins,' Sprecher said.
'Regulators need to broadly agree on some of these assumptions and require clearing houses to demonstrate they can meet these assumptions,' he added.


LCH.Clearnet streamlines ownership structure
LCH.Clearnet on Friday said it had finalised a shareholder streamlining scheme, bringing to an end a two-year saga over the ownership of one of the world's most prized derivatives post-trade assets.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/9279e7fa-cac5-11de-97e0-00144feabdc0,s01=1.html
*** The total number of LCH.Clearnet shareholders is now 105, down from an earlier 120.

LCH.Clearnet successfully realigns shareholder base
LCH.Clearnet, the leading independent clearing house group, has successfully completed the voluntary share redemption announced on 29 September 2009. Large users, each of which contributes more than 1% towards Group clearing fees and which together represent, in aggregate, over 80% of Group clearing revenues, have increased their total shareholding to 63% from 37%.
http://www.lchclearnet.com/media_centre/press_releases/2009-11-06.asp

EuroCCP slips into a €10m loss
The challenge of setting up a European clearing house has been highlighted by EuroCCP, the firm owned by US clearing giant the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, which said last week that it lost almost €10m ($14.9m) in 2008.
CME aims for European clearing in next quarter
CME Group, the Chicago-based derivatives exchange operator, said it expects to launch European clearing services in the first quarter of next year after hiring the former head of London-based LCH.Clearnet in July.
*** Andrew Lamb targets Q1 2010.

SGX announces revised date to implement new settlement processes and penalty framework
http://www.sgx.com/wps/wcm/connect/cp_en/site/press_room/news_releases/sgx+announces+revised+date+to+implement+new+settlement+processes+and+penalty+framework?presentationtemplate=design_lib/PT_Printer_Friendly


Analysis: Clearinghouses might not be solution for derivatives
Regulators worldwide have been pushing to have most over-the-counter derivatives traded through clearinghouses as a move to control risk. But clearinghouses might not provide a valid solution, said Darrell Duffie, a professor of finance at Stanford University. That will work only if there are few clearinghouses, Duffie said. "Many clearinghouses could be very bad," he said. "You would have increased counterparty exposure and excessive use of collateral, with multiple points of failure. This could add systemic risk." Reuters (11/11)



Tim May, chairman of Euroclear UK and Ireland, explains why Europe's established post-trade infrastructure providers should not be compared simplistically with the new generation post-MiFID entrants.
Read the interview (on reflection, I wouldn’t bother)

1. the range of clearing and settlement services offered by incumbent central counterparties (CCPs) and central securities depositories (CSDs) help to justify the higher overall pricing
2.The introduction of MiFID has encouraged us to change our services and pricing models, but we are not going to reduce fees to the same levels as the new entrants because we offer a more comprehensive service.”
3. Incumbent post-trade providers, like ourselves and LCH.Clearnet, aren’t necessarily trying to match the pricing of new pan-European entrants,
4. "There is a risk of a new entrant, which may or may not be formally recognised as a CCP, not being able to fulfil its role, whereas we are covered with stringent Financial Services Authority capital requirements so the chances of us not being able to function are very remote.”

Ummm, 1) why? And 2) isn’t that called cross subsidy? And 3) why? And it sounds like Tim likes to dig himself a nice big hole…4)so the chances of not being able to function are only very remote. That’s reassuring. I’ll stick with my CPSS-IOSCO standards thanks. Some things are better left unread.



Policy

SEC official worried about "naked access"
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A top U.S. securities regulator said on Thursday that she was concerned about naked access, where brokers give high-frequency traders unfiltered access to public markets.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20091105/bs_nm/us_sec_walter
*** Nakedness is next to Godliness.

Winners and Losers in Financial Crisis Emerging in Europe
By CHRIS V. NICHOLSON
PARIS The earnings of two European banks, BNP Paribas and Commerzbank, painted a stark contrast between the winners and losers of the financial crisis a little over a year after Lehman Brothers fell. The largest French bank, BNP Paribas, said Thursday that profit was up nearly 45 percent in the third quarter, rising on investment banking and the contribution of Fortis Bank, acquired from the Belgian government this year.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/06/business/global/06eurobank.html

04/11/2009 11:07:00
BLOOMBERG SMASHES PROPRIETARY IDENTIFIER MARKET
Market data vendor Bloomberg is looking to create an open standard for financial instrument identifiers by making its own proprietary symbology available for free to developers and market practitioners.
More on this story: http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20696

CEBS: Retention requirement not cure-all for securitisation
The Committee of European Banking Supervisors released a 60-page report that says the 5% retention requirement passed by the European Parliament is "not a panacea for previous issues that arose in securitisation". The CEBS did not recommend that the retention requirement be increased. The CEBS also recommended adding safeguards against market abuses. The suggestions are in line with an industry push for more disclosures in markets. For example, the Association for Financial Markets in Europe / European Securitisation Forum early this year issued best-practice guidelines for residential mortgage-backed securities disclosures. Risk.net (03 Nov.)


European groups move to boost securitisation deals
The European Financial Services Round Table is teaming up with AFME / ESF to revitalise the market for securities backed by pools of loans and other assets through the creation of a quality label. "We need to restore the economics of securitisation in Europe," said Rick Watson, managing director of AFME / ESF. "The challenge is how you bring confidence back in [asset-backed securities] and make sure it's clear in the mind of the buyer that the product they are buying matches their investment expectation." The Wall Street Journal (12 Nov.)

Securitization market faces fresh challenges
Changes to accounting rules will require banks and other issuers of asset-backed securities to retain a large stake in the deals. The rules are expected to make it more expensive to conduct securitization deals. Also, the rules force issuers to show assets on their balance sheet despite having sold the credit risk to investors. "Since the seller of the transaction has sold the risk, they shouldn't be required to hold additional capital to protect against losses they didn't incur," said Tom Deutsch, deputy executive director of the American Securitization Forum, an affiliate of SIFMA. The Wall Street Journal (11/11)



Regional

[ASX] Market Activity Report for October 2009
http://www.asx.com.au/about/pdf/ma_051109_monthly_activity_report2.pdf

SGX reschedules implementation of new settlement processes and penalty framework
5 November 2009 Singapore Exchange Limited (SGX) will be rescheduling the implementation of the new settlement processes and refined penalty framework from 6 November 2009 to a later date. The subsequent implementation of buy-in for failed securities due on T+3, which was scheduled for 30 November 2009, is also under review. The revised dates will be announced in due course after consultation with market participants.
http://bit.ly/2tO1kU

Settlement glitch delays SGX's post-trade revamp

Study Finds Overseas Listing Of Futures Contracts Benefits Home Exchanges
A study by the Capital Markets Cooperative Research Centre has found that trading in overseas-listed futures contracts benefits both the index futures as well as its component stocks in the home exchanges.
http://www.exchange-handbook.co.uk/index.cfm?section=news&action=detail&id=86613
*** liquidity begets liquidity

12/11/2009 11:33:00
DOW JONES TO SELL STOXX STAKE TO DEUTSCHE BÖRSE AND SIX GROUP
Dow Jones has agreed to sell its 33.3% stake in Swiss index provider Stoxx to Deutsche Börse and Six Group for EUR206.1 million in cash.
More on this story: http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20731

THE TRADE NEWS: Chan Succeeds Phillips at BlocSec
By Staff
11/13/09

HSBC sells Canary Wharf headquarters
HSBC has agreed the sale of its London headquarters at 8 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, to the National Pension Service of Korea (NPS) for £772.5 million in cash.
The sale-and-leaseback agreement will provide the group with a gain of approximately £350 million.
http://www.bankingtimes.co.uk/15112009-hsbc-sells-canary-wharf-headquarters/



The Berlin Wall:
1) 1918: It was 71 years before the fall of the Berlin Wall when November 9 first attained significance in German history. It was on that day in 1918 that the monarchy came to an end in Berlin.
2) 1923: Hitler made plans to pre-empt the presumed revolution, and on the evening of Nov. 8, had the beer hall surrounded with hundreds of armed SA men. Hitler stormed into the packed beer hall, fired his revolver into the roof and proclaimed a putsch against the Weimar Republic, ultimately planning to march on Berlin and overthrow the government.
3) 1938: The event has gone down in history as "The Night of the Broken Glass," or Kristallnacht in German -- a name that is shorthand for one of Germany's darkest, most horrifying nights. On Nov. 9, 1938, Nazi henchmen perpetrated a far-reaching pogrom, an orgy of violence directed against the country's Jewish population that resulted in tens of thousands of arrests, over 2,000 deaths, dozens of synagogues destroyed and hundreds of Jewish shops demolished, the shattered shop windows giving the event its name.
4) 1989: Unforgettable, the Berlin Wall falls.
What an important date for German history. Nov 9 runs deep. Amazing.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,660206-4,00.html


 Analysis: 20 years after fall of Berlin Wall, economic freedom leads way
Destruction of the Iron Curtain on Nov. 9, 1989, is a reminder of the importance of economic liberalism, right when the financial crisis has made people doubt it, according to The Economist. The move to take 500 million people out of poverty and into the middle class will be much more remembered in the future than the recent financial crisis. Political freedom has advanced at a varied pace in the past two decades, while economic freedom has flourished., The Economist (11/5)



TRADERS MAGAZINE: Commentary -- What's in a Name?
What Egyptian pigs and dark pools have in common.
By Dan Mathisson
11/10/09

The poor pigs. Last April 29, the government of Egypt ordered the immediate slaughter of every pig in the nation. The order was carried out with a ruthless efficiency, as an estimated 300,000 porcine souls were led to an untimely meeting with their maker. The reason for such a brutal campaign? An unfortunate name.

A newly discovered virus, dubbed "swine flu," was spreading rapidly in Mexico at the time. And just as the Ayds appetite suppressant demonstrated some 20 years ago, an association with a deadly disease doesn't enhance your brand. And so, after what must've been quite a messy few days, the pigs of Egypt were soon but a memory.

Is there a lesson in this story for Wall Street's latest product to come under public fire, the unfortunately named "dark pools"? Barron's said in a July article, "Dark pools of liquidity sound as though they belong in a Gothic novel, not on Wall Street." The Economist said the name "sounds ominous." A November article about dark pools in The New York Observer was accompanied by a picture of a corpse-like hand protruding from a dark lake, either desperately beckoning for help, or possibly threatening to pull you in. The underlying message was clear: Something spooky is going on here.

The truth is much less romantic: They are not spooky at all. Dark pools are computerized trading systems that match buyers and sellers without publicly displaying bids and offers. They are only dark before the trade. After the trade, just like exchanges, they must report to the tape immediately for the whole world to see. The first one was created in 1987, although the name "dark pool" only became popular within the past 10 years.

Now swept up in the same regulatory vortex that is whirling around short selling and high-frequency trading, these obscure trading systems have suddenly begun drawing rants from bloggers, tirades from editorial writers, proposals from regulators and even inquiries from U.S. senators. It all begs the question: Is it time to rename the damn things?

Shortly after Egypt's mass pig-ocide, the World Health Organization announced its own giant renaming effort to avoid a further pandemic of pig panic: From here on out, the flu formerly known as swine would be called by a name only a bureaucrat could love: "H1N1." Although governments around the world dutifully picked up the nom-de-PR, everyone else continues to call it "swine flu." With a vaccine now being aggressively distributed, the disease will likely be eradicated before the name "swine flu" is. The H1N1 experience demonstrates why renaming "dark pools" is unlikely to work. Once a name sticks with the public, unsticking it is close to impossible. Since the name can't easily be changed, are dark pools as doomed as the pigs? Not if we learn anything from our Egyptian friends. A few weeks ago, The New York Times ran an article titled "Belatedly, Egypt Spots Flaws in Wiping Out Pigs." As the story described, "The pigs used to eat tons of organic waste. Now the pigs are gone and the rotting food piles up on the streets ... What started out as an impulsive response to the swine flu threat has turned into a social, environmental and political problem for the Arab world's most populous nation." Though pigs had been considered pariahs, it turned out they were a valuable part of the ecosystem, providing a service that few understood or appreciated.

If dark pools were suddenly forced by a confused public to lose their darkness, what would the consequences be? Well, it would be much the same as in Cairo. Instead of food rotting in our streets, we'd have illiquid positions rotting in our portfolios. Dark pools play an important and underappreciated role in the trading ecosystem: They allow buyers and sellers to find each other without signaling to the entire world that a new player has entered the marketplace. Big long-term investors, like mutual funds and pension funds, rely on dark pools to trade some of their most sensitive orders.

Dark pools represent about 8 percent of U.S. volume, admittedly just a small niche, but enough to draw the ire of the major for-profit exchanges. The exchanges have been aggressively fighting the pools in Washington by creatively pushing the need for "transparency." In an article on Nov. 6, The Wall Street Journal quoted the CEO of a major exchange referring to dark pools on his quarterly earnings call: "We're comfortable that the regulatory discussions going on [in Washington] will be a significant net positive [for us]."

"Transparency" in dark pools is a "significant net positive" for exchanges because it strikes at the very heart of what the pools do. The whole point of dark pools is to hide sensitive order information, so that short-term traders can't sniff out big orders and trade ahead of them. It's hard to argue against increasing transparency on a delayed basis, say by disclosing dark pool volumes at the day's end, but doing it in real-time? Ask yourself who would be more likely to benefit from millions of new real-time trading data points: short-term quantitative traders, or long-term fundamental investors?

While relatively clean already, the rules under Regulation ATS do allow dark pool operators a little room to roll around in the mud by allowing dark pools to create private networks of traders. Dark pools sometimes shut off access to other broker-dealers for competitive reasons. Mandating fair access to all dark pools could clean out this last pigpen of exclusiveness.

But fair access doesn't have to mean open access. Restaurants can refuse to serve patrons based on their behaviors, for example by requiring shoes, but they can't refuse patrons for arbitrary reasons, like the color of their hair. Similarly, there is nothing wrong with dark pools excluding based on behaviors-for example, requiring that clients maintain a certain average order size, or a low frequency of order placement, or mandated average holding periods. But excluding clients for arbitrary reasons is unfair. By determining access to their pools based on objective behavioral criteria, the pools can do something much better than cleaning up their name--they can clean up their only significant flaw, leaving no remaining logical arguments for opponents.

Would the lack of logical arguments from opponents save the dark pools? Before the pig-killing decree, the Egyptian health authorities did not do much homework. A United Nations health organization called the slaughter "scientifically unjustified," which is an understatement. Had the authorities done the slightest bit of reading, they would have learned that pigs have nothing to do with the virus. But most likely, the authorities deliberately failed to check, because pigs were unloved by most Egyptians for religious reasons, and the swine flu panic served as a convenient excuse to sweep them away.

So this is where the analogy breaks down, and we can breathe a sigh of relief. Because in America, we don't have to worry about public prejudice against traders, right? In America, traders have always been allowed to freely trade dark or light, long or short. As the old Wall Street expression goes, "Bulls and bears make money. Pigs get slaughtered." Oh, wait--maybe the dark pools are screwed after all.



THE BANKER: Sowing the Seeds of Competitive Trading in Asia
By Michelle Price
November 2009

Asia has long-been regarded as a competition-averse, exchange-dominated marketplace. But this summer offered the first hints that small structural changes are afoot in the region, with the creation of a competition-friendly supervisory structure in Australia and, perhaps more significantly, the long-awaited regional entry of Chi-X, the hyper-fast and super-successful alternative trading venue.

The ambitious up-start is launching a full-scale attack on the region, with its first stop - it was revealed in August - to be the Singapore market. But there is an interesting twist to the latest installment of the Chi-X story: while in other markets the alternative trading platform has presented itself as a challenger to the incumbent exchange, in the Singapore market Chi-X has announced that it will be forming a joint venture (JV) with the Singapore Exchange (SGX) to launch the first exchange-led non-displayed or so-called 'dark' pool in the Asia-Pacific region.

Even more eye-catching, however, is the JV's intention to offer block crossing not only for equities listed on the SGX, but for those listed on the Australia, Hong Kong and Japan exchanges - albeit on an offshore basis - making it a pan-Asian proposition. This was a key draw for Chi-X, says John Lowrey, CEO of Chi-X Global. "SGX was the perfect partner because its ambitions are aligned with our ambitions in that it is interested in the development of the pan-Asian market," he says.

The deal, in which Chi-X's subsidiary technology company will provide the technology platform for the crossing network, marks a departure from the historical Chi-X model under which the company entered Canada and Europe not only as an alternative contender, but, at least initially, as a fully lit platform. "We're in the business of creating market centres that match the need for a variety of liquidity aggregation. Lit markets are one of those key places, but dark pools are just as valuable," says Mr Lowrey. In Singapore, he says, entering as a dark venue seemed the right strategy because it filled a need in the market.

That Chi-X has had to take a different approach in Asia reflects the challenges in the young Asian marketplace, where exchanges dominate not merely from a regulatory and structural perspective, but from a philosophical perspective too: for many Asian exchanges - which are often as much political as financial institutions - competition of the sort represented by the emboldened Chi-X is very unwelcome. But this is not a function of ignorance, says Lee Porter, managing director of Liquidnet Asia, the successful US-headquartered buy-side crossing network. "Exchanges in Asia are very cognisant of what happened in other markets by allowing other players in: they saw what happened to the market share."

According to Mr Lowrey, SGX also made the perfect partner because it welcomes competition in its own market. But by going dark and providing the requisite technology and technical expertise, Chi-X is able to offer the SGX a tantalising opportunity to expand its local and regional presence while securing for itself a long-sought-after entry into the region. In the view of one trader, the association with SGX, a well-established, if smaller south-east Asian exchange, is a "smart move" for Chi-X as it confers a strong degree of legitimacy on the brand which has yet to establish itself in the region.

In this respect, the deal is less about competition than it is about innovation. As such, it offers a key lesson for alternative venues sitting on the Asia sidelines: if competitors want to enter certain Asian markets, they will have to be creative. Attempting to attack the exchanges head on may prove - in some instances - the least strategic means of entry.

Post-trade troubles

It may be premature, however, to conclude much else. The JV is still in the process of applying for a licence for the Singapore market, although a spokesperson for Chi-X said the company anticipates no difficulties in this process and expects the JV to go live in 2010 as outlined in August.

The Banker understands that more details on the technical specifics of the deal are to follow in mid-November. These will be hotly anticipated by many market-watchers, who believe that there will be several wrinkles to iron out, not least the issue of clearing and settling across what the JV hopes will become a pan-Asian platform. According to the August announcement, SGX-listed stocks will be cleared and settled through SGX's securities clearing house and depository. But the JV will have to appoint a pan-Asian central counterparty (CCP) to clear any other trades. Jean-Pierre Baron, managing director for Asia-Pacific at Fidessa, a trading and connectivity software provider, says the realisation of a pan-Asian trading venue will be challenged by these back-end complications. "They will have to go downstream to the clearing level and that is very complex if you take a pan-Asian view. Equities are very localised markets and there are a lot of country-specific issues."

But the SGX-Chi-X JV is not the only trading venture proposing to span several Asian markets. In February, the Association of South-east Nations unveiled its plans to create a pan-Asian trading linkage which would allow, for example, a broker sitting in Thailand to trade stocks listed in the Philippines. Francis Lim, CEO of the Philippine Stock Exchange, a strong advocate of pan-Asian initiatives whose own exchange is part of the link-up, says it will eventually be progressed to the clearing and settlement level - but the details remain unclear.

What is clear, however, is that for any such pan-Asian utility to be a success, the post-trade process will have to be as seamless as possible, with each participating country's CCP able to clear cross-border on multiple venues. More importantly, it will have to be cost efficient. "If they can figure out a way to make the clearing work, then it has a really strong chance of being a success," says Glenn Lesko, CEO of Instinet Asia, an agency broker of which Chi-X is also a subsidiary. As such, it is clear that the SGX-Chi-X platform, if a success, will be important for the whole of the Asia region, offering a precedent for other ventures to follow. This is not lost on Mr Lowrey. "This announcement is not just around trading, but around the creation of infrastructure that is going to help the development of the Asian markets in general," he says.

Supervisory shake-up

Elsewhere in Asia, other developments are afoot, the most notable of which has taken place in Australia where a number of European upstarts have sought to shake up the status quo and compete with the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX). Chi-X, Liquidnet and AXE, a JV between the New Zealand Stock Exchange and five other banks, filed applications for trading licences more than two years ago to, what looked like until recently, no avail. But then in August, news came that a long-awaited shake-up of the unusual prevailing Australian supervisory structure - under which ASX would in theory have supervised its own competitors - would likely usher in a much-anticipated era of competition.

The ASX, which will be stripped of its real-time market trading supervisory powers, has accepted the development with little protest. ASX declined to comment on the implications of the development for the Australian marketplace. However, in the exchange's annual results briefing for 2009, chairman David Gonski made his feelings on the subject perfectly clear when he suggested that competition would not necessarily bring the cost savings to the comparatively small Australian marketplace that onlookers have been led to expect.

He also told the assembled shareholders that it is not a foregone conclusion that the Australian government will issue new licences as a result of the regulatory overhaul. A total failure to grant new licences, however, would seem a perverse outcome. Mr Porter believes this is unlikely. "The government would not have made the structural change if it had not intended to grant licences." But this is not to say, however, that the road to competition will be entirely smooth, he adds. "As for when it happens, or what other hurdles have to be jumped over, it will be interesting to see, but it is not going to be easy," he says.

Meanwhile, Chi-X has not given up its ambitions in Australia. Although it has not committed to a formal timeline, the company is likely to enter the Australian market in Q4 next year to coincide with the completion of the supervisory transition, says Mr Lowrey. "Both the regulator and the reserve bank are getting fully organised to allow for competition." And, although many market watchers are under the impression that AXE has shut up shop, Heather Kirkham, a spokesperson for AXE, said in an e-mail: "The recent announcement by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission is very formative, and the New Zealand Stock Exchange and the other AXE shareholders are watching developments with interest" - as are many in the US and Europe who believe the summer's events signal the first seeds of true competition in Asia.


Scott Riley
Business Development

[Please note my new email address: scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com]

Fortis Global Clearing
8th Floor 50 Bridge Street Sydney Australia 2000
(Off)+61 (0)2 8916 9634 (Mob): +61 (0)418 117 627
 scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com

Friday, November 6, 2009

AMCF News: MiFFed, 25%, BME, JSCC, TAs

Happy second birthday to MiFID. The idea of the terrible 2’s does so resonate with me.

On MiFID, we’ve seen some negative comment from the RIE’s. It may be valid, but it just comes across as so self serving I can’t be bothered to read it.

On platforms yet again we see more evidence about getting the ownership and governance model right. How times have changed since we embarked on demutualisation.
Congratulations to ELX. I remain a supporter (well, in spirit, bravo chaps, if not liquidity) and a believer.

Some records came tumbling down in late Oct. Chi-X up in the European exchange ranking (over 25% FTSE market share on some days for those are not following the numbers, yep, 25%) and likewise EMCF, averaging 2 million trades a day.

As for Madrid.
Yes, I applaud a European initiative….but there is something about this that does not ring true with the playground child in me. Why should BME get the support of European markets on the one hand, whilst on the other hand, the markets still have to live with the put through rule. Best execution suffers yet the market users are being asked to reward that behaviour? Don’t put me down as a subscriber just yet.

On educated reader did some analysis of the LCH results. My point on transparency was between equity revenue in LCH Ltd and Clearnet SA. I think the SA pricing model, of cheap blue chips, and slightly more for the less liquids is a step in the right direction. No one ever intended to cross subsidise the two types, but now it is recognised it makes sense to start measuring and addressing the issue (akin to tick sizes).

Japan opens JSCC and moves to T+3.

Broadridge pulling out of clearing I believe is right and removes a conflict of interest (perceived or otherwise). Just like Nasdaq OMX story last week. Good luck to Penson.

What is it with Trade Associations? They’ve got too much alphabet soup. Welcome SAA…AFME…CISI. (Sounds like a drunk springbok asking directions to the city….and as if we’d ever give them the right ones).

This was published in SMH where readers were asked to sum up the core values of Australia in seven sentences in response the prime minister's list.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/the-tribal-mind/what-australians-actually-believe-in/2005/09/19/1126981993298.html
*** quite insightful.

The spirit in which a thing is given determines that in which the debt is acknowledged; it's the intention, not the face-value of the gift, that's weighed.
Seneca (5 BC - 65 AD), Letters to Lucilius, 100 A.D.
*** what a clever chap, Seneca. I assume Lucilius had written explaining how disappointed he was with his most recent “gift”

Have a great week-end all…and give a little, to family or friends…and be happy for the memories shared. They last forever.

S
http://clearingandsettlement.blogspot.com/




Platforms

NYSE EURONEXT PROFITS SLIDE; SELLS OFF STAKE IN US FUTURES BUSINESS Nyse Euronext has reported a 28% drop in third quarter profit amid steep declines in revenue from cash equity trading in Europe and the US. The exchange operator has also sold off a significant equity stake in its futures business Nyse Liffe US to a group of five leading banks and liquidity providers.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20677
*** …and the investors are: Citadel Securities, Getco, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and UBS

Does inverted pricing work in Europe?Multilateral trading facility
BATS Europe's retention in October of the FTSE 100 market share it won with its September price promotion may indicate that inverting fees can generate liquidity on a sustained basis, but it also suggests the continued growth of high-frequency trading in London.http://bit.ly/3W9AWy**** BATS and inverted? You would think prices were hung upside down. (this remark from Lothian is cringe worthy, but funny)

Liquidnet Is Liquid In APAC
Liquidnet recently reported its quarter ended September 30, 2009 where, among other achievements, notional executed in Asia-Pacific increased 52% to US$3 billion from the previous quarter. And...
Read More Here

Volume in European ‘dark pools’ trading soars The value of trades undertaken within independently owned “dark pools” of liquidity in Europe soared from €2.2bn ($3.2bn) in January to €9.5bn in October, Thomson Reuters said. (Financial Times)

02/11/2009 11:54:00
DEUTSCHE BÖRSE BEGINS PAN-EUROPEAN BLUE CHIP TRADING
Deutsche Börse has launched a pan-European market, based on its Xetra electronic trading platform, as it looks to take on the raft of new competitors to have emerged in the wake of MiFID.
More on this story:
http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20681

FINANCIAL TIMES: LSE Close to Turquoise AgreementBy Jeremy Grant 10/29/09No cash will change hands in the deal. Instead, Turquoise will be merged with Baikal, the LSE’s nascent “dark pool” block trading facility, while the LSE will retain a 51 per cent controlling stake.

Dispute among futures exchanges is about to intensifyNYSE Euronext and Depository Trust & Clearing have agreed to jointly develop a clearinghouse for cash Treasuries and Treasury futures. ELX, a fledgling exchange backed by some of the largest names on Wall Street, has attacked the venture as being anti-competitive because it will likely prevent ELX from striking a similar deal with DTCC. The new futures exchanges are trying to break the near-monopoly on Treasury futures held by CME Group. Financial Times (tiered subscription model) (10/29)

ELX FUTURES REPORTS RECORD VOLUME FOR OCTOBER 2009 ELX Futures, L.P. (ELX Futures) announced today record trading volumes in the month of October for its four U.S. Treasury futures products. Since its launch on July 10th, ELX Futures has been gaining volume and market share, and October has turned out to be a breakout month for the new fully regulated electronic exchange.
http://www.elxfutures.com/getdoc/fb5ea615-7399-427f-a908-bfa512d8ba97/ELX-FUTURES-REPORTS-RECORD-VOLUME-FOR-OCTOBER-2009.aspx

Eurex plots European energy tie-up Frankfurt-based Eurex has become the latest European exchange to push into power derivatives, agreeing to a new link with Germany’s European Energy Exchange a month after transatlantic rival Nasdaq OMX launched a similar market in the UK.


Clearing


Increase in MTF trading drives EMCF volume growth
EMCF’s daily clearing volume exceeded 2.6 million trades for the first time on 21 October, and clearer expects the monthly average for October to be 2 million trades a day. Its average daily clearing volume in 2008 was 600,000 transactions.
“EMCF is proud to be at the heart of these two fundamental shifts in the European trading landscape – the adoption of full CCP clearing in the Nordics and the growing importance of multilateral trading facilities, as both of these changes provide more efficiency to the post-trade environment, leading to more liquidity and cost advantages for our clients and for the European equities market in general,” said Jan Booij, CEO, EMCF

CLEARING COUNTERPARTIES AGREE DEFAULT INFORMATION SHARE PRINCIPLES
http://www.finextra.com/fullpr.asp?id=30766


Madrid bourse challenges U.S. DTCC in derivativesBy Huw JonesLONDON, Nov 3 (Reuters) - The Madrid bourse (BME.MC) scored a first in Europe on Tuesday by unveiling plans to open a warehouse for derivatives contracts, pitting itself against America's DTCC as it seeks to exploit a regulatory crackdown.
http://www.reuters.com/article/BANKSL/idUSL325423620091103

BME TO TAKE ON DTCC WITH TRADE REPOSITORY PLAN Spanish bourse Bolsas y Mercados Españoles (BME) has announced plans to create a trade repository for over-the-counter (OTC) financial instruments, in a move that will pit the European exchange operator against the US-based Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC).
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20691


LCH.CN Group results are finally out. (Blog 2nd Oct)
This analysis was offered by one reader….

Eur M Equities FI Deriv/Swaps Comm/Energy Total %

Gross 137 81 210 144 572

CLR fees 115 30 121 63 328 57%
Net Int 22 51 90 81 244 43%

Tariff reductions on the Group’s equity markets contributed to a reduction in revenue from €189.0 million to €137.3 million. The
Group delivered a 25% reduction in clearing fees on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and SIX Swiss Exchange’s trades in January 2008, and the same reduction on NYSE Euronext cash markets from April 2008.
Together these tariff changes reduced clearing fees charged to members by €52.7 million.
Volumes across the NYSE Euronext cash markets rose by 20.6% from 161.1 million to 194.3 million trades in the year. The LSE’s volume rose by 37.9% to 189.9 million trades in the year, and SWX Europe’s volume rose by 60.4% to 24.3 million trades.
At the end of 2008 SIX x-clear gained access to LSE and commenced a rival clearing service to the Group. To date, this has attracted two member.
Page 8.
http://www.lchclearnet.com/Images/FINAL%20low%20res_tcm6-52049.pdf


T2S SPAT TURNS UP THE HEAT AT SIBOS
A progress report by the European Central bank on the controversial Target2Securities integrated settlement project descended into a three-way spat between agent banks, securities depositories and the central bank over costs, timetabling and information transparency at a hot and heavy Sibos session in Hong Kong.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20493


Policy

TRANSCRIPT: Robert C. Gasser’s Testimony on Dark Pools, Flash Orders, High Frequency Trading and Other Market Structure Issues before the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance and Investment”10/29/09
http://www.itg.com/news_events/Senate_Testimony_102809.pdf

While the need for a standardised European consolidated tape and best bid & offer is undisputed in Europe's fragmented post-MiFID equities market, participants are divided on where it adds the most value, according to the result of the latest TRADE poll.
Read the article
http://www.thetradenews.com/operations-technology/market-data/3827



Asia

EASTERN EXCHANGES LOOK TO THE WEST FOR TECHNOLOGY The six exchanges that plan to launch a pan-Asian equities market have approached Nasdaq OMX and NYSE Euronext to provide technology for the system.
http://mail.efnmail.co.uk/r/140722942/MjU3MzA2OjIyODY5/
*** This headline is a bit misleading – s/be ASEAN (Indonesia, Malasia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam), a totally different wallet size consideration.
http://www.aseansec.org/


Japan’s alternative platforms to get CCP clearing
The Japan Securities Clearing Corporation (JSCC), the central counterparty for Japan’s stock exchanges, will be able to clear trades from the country’s alternative trading platforms, known as proprietary trading systems (PTSs), from July next year.
Rather than developing a separate clearing function for PTSs, JSCC will adapt the interface to its current clearing processing system to allow it to receive transaction data from the PTSs’ matching engines. Work to adapt the system is already underway and testing will begin in the second quarter of next year. The clearer also needs to revise its rules and obtain approval from Japan’s Financial Services Agency.


Implementation Date of Abolishment of T+4 Settlement and Trading Suspension
The Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) recently announced that the implementation date of the abolishment of T+4 settlement and trading suspension for a predetermined period shall be Monday, November 16, 2009 as previously notified on April 1, 2009.(Note)The TSE will abolish T+4 settlement and unify the settlement cycle to T+3 settlement for regular transactions of stocks [...]
http://www.asiaetrading.com/implementation-date-of-abolishment-of-t4-settlement-and-trading-suspension/






Trade Associations

SDIA becomes SAA
The Securities and Derivatives Industry Association on Sunday became the Stockbrokers Association of Australia, after receiving approval from its members at the association's annual meeting last week.
AFMA (
www.afma.com.au ), not the Australian Fisheries Management Authority (www.afma.gov.au), now looks to take over the running. I think this is a good thing. I don’t think the “stockbroker” bit of SDIA sat well with representing wholesale security market needs. This came through in their last conference – some speakers spoke to the retail audience, some on securities policy.

LIBA + SIFMA = AFME
I also understand this week the LIBA and SIFMA merger completes for the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (
www.afme.eu).

Securities & Investment Institute Becomes Chartered Institute For Securities & Investment
04/11/09
The SII is pleased to announce that from 1st November 2009 it changed its name to the Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment (CISI).
http://www.secinst.co.uk/bookmark/genericform.aspx?form=29848780&URL=royalcharter




PENSON BUYS BROADRIDGE CLEARING CONTRACTS; OUTSOURCES TECH SERVICES Penson Worldwide has entered into a deal to buy the clearing contracts of Broadridge Financial Solutions' Ridge business for up to $70 million and then outsource some technology and processing services to the seller.
Full story:
http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=20689



Madoff: SEC Could Have Had Him EarlierJailed former financier Bernard Madoff says lack of basic investigatory moves by the SEC allowed his ...
*** scum bag…if he had any ethics he could have stopped it the day it began, that would have been early and worthy enough in my book. (haven’t bothered to read the story).



Anne Frank:
No one has ever become poor by giving.

Gifts allow us to demonstrate exactly how little we know about a person.
Pam Davis, House M.D., It's A Wonderful Lie, 2008



Scott Riley
Business Development

[Please note my new email address:
scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com]

Fortis Global Clearing
8th Floor 50 Bridge Street Sydney Australia 2000
((Off)+61 (0)2 8916 9634 È(Mob): +61 (0)418 117 627
*
scott.riley@au.fortisclearing.com