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Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler has voiced concerns that the current system for executing individual investors’ equity trades is rife with conflicts of interest. The Securities and Exchange Commission believes small investors could pocket about $1.5 billion a year from better trade execution. The question is whether someone else’s wallet could lighten by that amount. A new series of SEC rule proposals are meant to address problems with equity market structure for investors, particularly for small investors when it comes to the practice of payment for order flow, or PFOF. That is when a brokerage such as Robinhood Markets or Charles Schwab sends retail orders to a wholesale market-maker such as Citadel Securities or Virtu Financial and collects payments.
Of the four market structure-related proposals, the "order competition rule" represents the biggest potential change. The rule would require stock orders from individual investors that have no price limits to be sent to auctions where market participants could compete to fulfill them. The regulator will also consider whether to strengthen an existing rule requiring brokers to provide information on the quality of their customer trade executions. The new best execution standard for brokers could also impact payments to retail brokers from wholesalers and exchanges for order flow. The last major shakeup of the markets was Regulation National Market System, adopted in June 2005 but which did not come into law until 2007.
Market overhaul pits perfect against good-enough
  + stars: | 2022-12-14 | by ( Ben Winck | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
At present, more than 90% of individual investors’ trades are sold to a small group of market-makers, according to the agency. The profit that middlemen make from handling retail stock trades suggests Gensler has a point. The trouble is that retail investors have, in some ways, never had it so good. The changes reflect the largest overhaul of market rules since the agency introduced the Regulation National Market System framework in 2005. The proposals range from new disclosures on execution quality to an auction system for individual investors’ stock trades.
These wholesalers may send the orders to exchanges, but often match the orders against their own internal order flow. However, Gensler has claimed that pension funds and other institutional investors are not able to interact with that retail order flow. Execution quality disclosure Market participants are required to submit monthly reports indicating how well they are executing client orders. Gensler has said investors today need a better understanding of how well their trading orders are being executed. Gensler's broad agenda The proposals on market structure are part of a broad agenda Gensler has undertaken this year.
Insider's Bianca Chan explored this trend with a piece on how cloud providers like AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud are reimagining themselves as business consultants. Many of the biggest cloud providers have stood up teams focused on interfacing with the C-suite to advise them on how a move to the cloud can be an opportunity to overhaul things. It's not hard to see how this could end up being big business for the cloud providers. Cloud providers still have a long way to go to be a real threat to consultants, but there is potential there. Click here to read more about how cloud providers are becoming the new-age consultants for Wall Street.
The FOIA request sought, among other things, communications between SEC Chair Gary Gensler and various stakeholders involved in retail stock trading. Cifu has said Virtu may sue the SEC over potential rule changes Gensler outlined in June. Agencies legally have 20 days to respond to FOIA requests, but are not required to provide all responsive documents within that time frame. FOIA requests do not always yield substantive responses and can have lengthy waiting periods. Virtu is represented by law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, where Cifu previously worked as a lawyer.
The coming week is also the busiest of the corporate earnings season, with about a third of the S & P 500 companies releasing results. "Historically, the market waits for the last Fed rate hike to be introduced and then the market climbs higher. The S & P 500 was up more than 8.8% for the month. The Dow was up 5.7% on the week, the S & P 500 was up 5.7% and the Nasdaq was up 2.2%. The 50-day moving average is 3,841 for the S & P 500, and it was well above it Friday afternoon for the second time in the past week.
Brokerages jump on report SEC stops short of banning PFOF deals
  + stars: | 2022-09-22 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com RegisterRetail brokers route most customer orders via wholesale brokers than exchanges, as wholesalers generally offer a slightly better price. Most retail brokers also accept rebates, or payments, from wholesalers in lieu of orders. read moreShares of Robinhood Markets Inc , which makes around 75% of its revenue from PFOF, climbed 5%, while Virtu Financial (VIRT.O) added 9% in early trading. Britain, Canada, and Australia have already banned PFOF, while SEC Chairman Gary Gensler had suggested in August that the regulator could go that route. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com RegisterReporting by Mehnaz Yasmin and Medha Singh in Bengaluru; editing by Uttaresh.VOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Darden Restaurants — Shares of Olive Garden's parent company fell more than 4% after Darden's fiscal first-quarter results showed lighter-than-expected revenue. The company reported $1.56 in earnings per share on $2.45 billion of revenue. Eli Lilly — The pharmaceutical stock climbed 4.2% after UBS upgraded Eli Lilly to buy from neutral. KB Home – Shares of homebuilder KB Home slipped 4% after the company reported earnings that disappointed Wall Street's revenue expectations. The company reported $3.13 in adjusted earnings per share, below the $3.20 anticipated by analysts, according to Refinitiv.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSingle-stock ETFs are innovative, but they aren't for everyone, says Virtu's Bob GreifeldBob Greifeld, Virtu Financial chairman, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss investment plays in single stock ETFs.
Current and former employees at prominent quant trading operations spoke to Insider anonymously for this story, citing fear of legal reprisals. "At the NSA, the penalty for leaking is twenty-five years in prison," Simons liked to tell employees, according to Gregory Zuckerman's book "The Man Who Solved the Market." In the early 2000s, quant noncompetes were narrower and shorter — six to nine months was industry standard, quant recruiters who had to navigate these obstacles told Insider. But it has aggressively pursued employees it believes have crossed the firm, according to court filings and media reports. Absent such changes, quant noncompetes will likely continue to proliferate with little resistance from employees.
Persons: Ken Griffin, they'd, It's, Matt Moye, they've, David Marshall, Jim Simons, George Soros, John Paulson, Philip Falcone, Jonathan Ernst, RenTech, Simons, Gregory Zuckerman's, Moye, quant, Pavel Volfbeyn, Alexander Belopolsky, spooked, Eric Wepsic, Shaw, , Izzy Englander, Rick Wastrom, Smith Hanley, Jane Street burgeoned, Peter Friedman, Brennan Hughes, Griffin —, They've, Friedman, Chase Lochmiller, Ray Dalio, Jane Street, Hughes, Samuel Estreicher, Estreicher, I'm, David, Wastrom, Marshall, noncompetes Organizations: Citadel Securities, Renaissance Technologies, Citadel, St John's Law School, Center for Labor, Employment, REUTERS, NSA, Fund, RenTech, Millennium Management, Millennium, D.E, Trading, Integra Advisors, Wall, Google, Sigma, Polychain, Getty, Bridgewater Associates, National Labor Relations Board, Schonfeld Strategic Advisors, Group, New York University, school's Center for Labor, John's Law, , New Locations: America, Bridgewater, New York, Hudson, Riker's Island, Houston, Chicago, Connecticut, — California, St, New York , Illinois
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