Thursday, 1 October 2009

Dark Pools in Danger?

Increasing regulatory supervision and calls for transperancy on one side and the threating proliferation of "unregulated and opaque" Dark Pool and crossing networks by large institutions, have increased the calls by exchanges and exchange federations to review regulation and even bann them.

While ther global debate is in full swing, China has clearelly distance it self from any alternative trading venues in the country and prohibited the access to any "non-transperent" trading venues like dark pools for it's QDII (Qualified Domestic Institutional Investors).

Below Article highlight the current trends and voices

What's the Matter with Dark Pools, 02.10.2009

Dark pools are on the regulatory front burner. They're seen as competing with the displayed markets, even as they've captured a segment of trading from the desks of broker-dealers' upstairs.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is now bearing down on issues related to trading in dark pools and how much flow can execute in individual pools without triggering obligations to the rest of the marketplace. To provide some perspective on this broader discussion....

London Stock Exchange to leave FESE 30.09.2009

But the move is a sign that a recent criticism by some of the world’s largest exchanges of the large banks’ off-exchange activities is not shared by some exchanges, which see their interests increasingly aligned with those same banks.

n a letter to Eddy Wymeersch, chairman of the Committee of European Securities Regulators, Ms Hardt said FESE believed the banks’ dark pools were “unregulated venues” operating with “full opacity”. The European equities market was “becoming a dealer market”.

Chi-X Global alleges ‘fear card’ move by ASX 30.09.2009

The head of Chi-X Global, the equities trading platform, on Wednesday accused the Australian Securities Ex­change of playing the “fear card” after the exchange’s chairman spoke of the dangers of allowing multiple share trading venues.

New ideas fail to lift mood over dark pools 24.09.2009

Yet even as dark pools continue to generate eye-catching ideas, controversy is raging over their very existence. In Europe, the issue is pitting exchanges against big banks in a new battle over control of billions of dollars in share trading orders.

Exchanges call on G20 to tackle dark pools 23.09.2009

The World Federation of Exchanges (WFE) has urged G20 leaders to press for market reform to tackle the uneven playing field and eroded price discovery it claims has been caused by the emergence of alternative trading platforms such as dark pools.

In a letter sent to Mario Draghi, head of the financial stability board at the Bank for International Settlements ahead of the G20 summit in Pittsburgh, the WFE calls for more uniform rules between exchange-traded and "less-regulated" markets.

The WFE warns: "The heightened opacity of certain market operations in many countries inhibits price discovery and may lead to negative outcomes, such as increased volatility."

"Taken together, the combination of the absence of a level playing field between execution venues and decreased market transparency is an unsettling development," says the letter, signed by William Brodsky, chairman of the WFE.

The exchanges call on G20 leaders to agree on ways to avoid "regulatory arbitrage" to ensure market participants do not just go to countries with weak rules.

Source: Finetik, 01.10.2009

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