Post by sandi66 on Jul 29, 2009 14:47:38 GMT -5
Kaufman Demands Level Playing Field for Investors
Says we have unequal markets, which the SEC must restore: “Protecting investors is too important to the nation, to the integrity of our financial markets, and to our economic recovery.”
July 28, 2009
WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-DE) went to the Senate floor today to implore the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to address a range of issues that include "flash orders," naked short selling and the "uptick rule" in his continued effort to restore investor confidence in the stock markets.
"We have an unfair playing field that leaves us with, in effect, two markets: one for powerful insiders and another for the average investor," said Sen. Kaufman. "One market for huge volume, high-speed players, who can take advantage of every loophole for profit, and another market for retail investors, who must play by the rules and whose orders are filled without any special priority. This situation simply cannot continue. It is the financial equivalent of ‘separate and unequal.'"
"To use a baseball metaphor, flash orders allow some batters to pay to see the catcher's signals to the pitcher, while the rest of us don't see them," Sen. Kaufman continued. "Markets that permit a privileged few to have special access to information cannot maintain their credibility."
Kaufman also reviewed SEC progress to date on proposals to restore the substance of the prior uptick rule and to eliminate naked short selling. He deemed it "progress . . . but lacking a sense of urgency."
Full remarks, as prepared for delivery:
Mr. President, all Americans hope that the "green shoots" we have seen recently - evidence that the economy may be turning around - won't wither. One thing that will help make our recovery strong and sustainable is the return of investor confidence. That is why making certain that our financial markets operate fairly and openly is so important.
Mr. President, free and fair markets and democracy are America's two greatest pillars of strength.
Our financial markets have long been the engine of American growth and the envy of the world. Efficient and free capital markets are essential to all that makes America great: investment in private enterprise, the availability of capital to expand and grow our economy through innovation and new ideas, and the ability to save for retirement in hopes that investments will result in comfort in our later years.
But we have seen what happens when you take the referees off the field, when we fail to have clear and fair rules for everyone. It is the job of our democratic government to set those rules, and to keep the referees - our financial regulators - on the field.
I rise today because we continue to see that our financial markets simply do not operate on a level playing field for all investors. And that is a threat to the credibility of our financial markets and, as a result, to our country's economic well-being.
We have a unfair playing field that leaves us with, in effect, two markets: one for powerful insiders and another for the average investor. One market for huge volume, high-speed players, who can take advantage of every loophole for profit, and another market for retail investors, who must play by the rules and whose orders are filled without any special priority. This situation simply cannot continue. It is the financial equivalent of "separate and unequal."
Mr. President, I offer my colleagues three examples of this two-tier system, which undermines the fairness and efficiency of our financial markets.
First, today the biggest players on Wall Street are using their automated, high-speed trading programs to engage in short selling of stocks. Informed observers believe organized "bear raids" - short selling combined with coordinated "misinformation" campaigns - contributed to the demise of Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, key elements in the collapse of our financial markets last year. With the repeal of the uptick rule in 2007, and no substantial substitute in its place, the threat of such damaging manipulation is still with us.
Mr. President, since March 3 I have spoken frequently about the urgent need for the SEC to restore the substance of the uptick rule. This rule required investors simply to pause and to wait for an uptick in price before continuing to short sell. Without such a rule in place, investors who own those stocks are more vulnerable to hedge fund bear raiders.
So far, the SEC has initiated a rule-making and conducted on April 8 a Roundtable discussion among key experts on some kind of price test that could substantially replace the uptick rule for today's high-speed, high-tech markets. While that process has begun, we have yet to see it bear fruit.
Second, big market players can engage in naked short selling - selling stock for which they have no legal claim and which they often cannot deliver.
Since my first speech on this subject in March, I have come to the floor several times and co-authored letters with my colleagues about the need for the SEC to end naked short selling. In that abusive practice, traders bet on shares losing value: shares they have not borrowed - and in some cases never even intend to borrow - in time for settlement.
Yesterday, the SEC made permanent a temporary rule they had enacted last fall and proposed some new transparency measures. And the Commission announced plans for a Roundtable discussion on September 30, two months from now. The Commission will finally begin to discuss publicly the potential solutions that a bipartisan group of Senators and I have been urging: either a pre-borrow requirement or a centralized "hard locate" system. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation tells us that it has the capacity and the willingness to implement that system - but only if the SEC requires it through a rule.
That is some progress, Mr. President, but we need more urgency at the SEC to implement tougher rules that will stop naked short selling through an enforceable system. This is imperative, because the current "reasonable belief" standard is virtually unenforceable, even against those who engage in concerted action to manipulate prices downward. Yesterday's announcement by the SEC admits that the rule they made permanent yesterday has only reduced fails to deliver by 57 percent.
That leaves a lot of room for improvement. Why not have an enforceable system, such as that proposed last week by the seven Senators, that could end naked short selling once and for all? I am hopeful we will soon see movement on this.
Third, we have the most recent revelation of so-called "flash orders" by high-frequency traders. These allow exchange members who pay a fee to get a first look at share order flows before the general public. By viewing this buy and sell order information for just milliseconds before it goes to the wider market, these investors gain an unfair advantage over the rest.
Today, I join Senator Schumer in urging the SEC to prohibit the use of these flash orders, used in connection with optional display periods currently permitted by DirectEdge, Bats Exchange and NASDAQ
As the New York Stock Exchange complained to the SEC on May 28, selling flash orders for a fee provides "non-public order information to a select class of market participants at the expense of a free and open market system." To use a baseball metaphor, flash orders allow some batters to pay to see the catcher's signals to the pitcher, while the rest of us don't see them. We have to make an informed judgment with the normal amount of risk. Markets that permit a privileged few to have special access to information cannot maintain their credibility.
Mr. President, I ask: Is this really what is happening on Wall Street today? When millions of Americans have lost so much money in the stock market, do Wall Street actors continue to make record trading profits by exploiting loopholes using high-speed computers? William Donaldson, former Chairman of the SEC and the New York Stock Exchange, has said "This is where all the money is getting made . . . If an individual investor doesn't have the means to keep up, they're at a huge disadvantage."
As Senator Schumer wrote in his letter: "If allowed to continue, these practices will undermine the confidence of ordinary investors, and drive them away from our capital markets." America simply cannot afford this loss of integrity of its financial markets.
Amazingly, it is a loophole in current regulations that allows this unfair practice. This can and should be fixed immediately.
Flash orders, the uptick rule, and naked short selling are not just a list of complaints, I believe they are interconnected. They are interconnected by an unsupported faith in the religion of self-regulation and liquidity. That religion believes that no price is too high for deeper liquidity - maximizing the volume and frequency of transactions -- because it reveals the greatest amount of information about stock values. And there is one more article of faith - that innovation by market players is always beneficial.
When the financial markets were decimalized and the uptick rule repealed, the SEC and leading market institutions claimed that electronic trading and technology would lead to deeper liquidity and market efficiencies benefitting all investors. High-speed trading, sophisticated algorithms, high volume short selling - all have grown exponentially in recent years. MIT - our nation's greatest engineering school - sent 11 percent of its 2008 graduates to work on Wall Street. All this, some say, has led to deeper liquidity.
Mr. President, America was founded with a spirit of entrepreneurship and a celebration of economic innovation. There are so many things Wall Street does right, and historically Wall Street was built on a foundation of trust and credibility.
But America was also born from the principle of equal opportunity. While we should keep encouraging the kind of commercial ingenuity that fuels the prosperity of our financial markets, we must ensure that technology is not employed to advantage one small group over the rest. That is not what the free market is about.
Indeed, there is a place in our markets for high-speed arbitrage functions, because they can and have narrowed bid-ask spreads and lowered the cost of trading for all. High-speed arbitrage also helps price discovery and keeps the prices of similar assets traded in different markets more closely aligned.
When it comes to flash orders, however, I think most investors, even those who trade regularly, are waking up very surprised to learn that these practices are even permitted. Just as we were surprised last year to learn about the rampant extent of naked short selling. Many investors have been suspicious for years that insiders on Wall Street hold built-in advantages over average investors. Flash orders are a classic example of being taken aback not by what is illegal, but by what is legally occurring directly under the noses of our financial regulators and leading market institutions.
Since I began speaking out against naked short selling, I have heard from some of the biggest companies in America, who are concerned about the effects of naked short selling. But they do not want to speak out, because they fear that any hint of vulnerability they admit even privately to public officials will leak out and make them the target of predatory raiders.
I have also heard from investors around the country. They have complained that large broker-dealers are somehow permitted to trade ahead of most investors. These average and even sophisticated investors relate that, in their experience, they never seem to be able to execute trades at the best available published bid or asking price. They complain that large orders always seem to get a priority over their smaller orders. Until now, I never really knew what to makes of these claims.
In the New York Times this past Friday, on investor blogs for weeks now, and in a comment letter filed by the New York Stock Exchange on May 28, commentators have begun to explain how flash orders work to - quite literally - "pick the pockets" of the average investor. In essence, these traders get a very quick look at all pending orders in advance and, through technology, can trade ahead of those orders.
Mr. President, I ask consent that this article be read into the record.
July 24, 2009
Stock Traders Find Speed Pays, in Milliseconds
By CHARLES DUHIGG
It is the hot new thing on Wall Street, a way for a handful of traders to master the stock market, peek at investors' orders and, critics say, even subtly manipulate share prices.
It is called high-frequency trading - and it is suddenly one of the most talked-about and mysterious forces in the markets.
Powerful computers, some housed right next to the machines that drive marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange, enable high-frequency traders to transmit millions of orders at lightning speed and, their detractors contend, reap billions at everyone else's expense.
These systems are so fast they can outsmart or outrun other investors, humans and computers alike. And after growing in the shadows for years, they are generating lots of talk.
Nearly everyone on Wall Street is wondering how hedge funds and large banks like Goldman Sachs are making so much money so soon after the financial system nearly collapsed. High-frequency trading is one answer.
And when a former Goldman Sachs programmer was accused this month of stealing secret computer codes - software that a federal prosecutor said could "manipulate markets in unfair ways" - it only added to the mystery. Goldman acknowledges that it profits from high-frequency trading, but disputes that it has an unfair advantage.
Yet high-frequency specialists clearly have an edge over typical traders, let alone ordinary investors. The Securities and Exchange Commission says it is examining certain aspects of the strategy.
"This is where all the money is getting made," said William H. Donaldson, former chairman and chief executive of the New York Stock Exchange and today an adviser to a big hedge fund. "If an individual investor doesn't have the means to keep up, they're at a huge disadvantage."
For most of Wall Street's history, stock trading was fairly straightforward: buyers and sellers gathered on exchange floors and dickered until they struck a deal. Then, in 1998, the Securities and Exchange Commission authorized electronic exchanges to compete with marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange. The intent was to open markets to anyone with a desktop computer and a fresh idea.
But as new marketplaces have emerged, PCs have been unable to compete with Wall Street's computers. Powerful algorithms - "algos," in industry parlance - execute millions of orders a second and scan dozens of public and private marketplaces simultaneously. They can spot trends before other investors can blink, changing orders and strategies within milliseconds.
High-frequency traders often confound other investors by issuing and then canceling orders almost simultaneously. Loopholes in market rules give high-speed investors an early glance at how others are trading. And their computers can essentially bully slower investors into giving up profits - and then disappear before anyone even knows they were there.
High-frequency traders also benefit from competition among the various exchanges, which pay small fees that are often collected by the biggest and most active traders - typically a quarter of a cent per share to whoever arrives first. Those small payments, spread over millions of shares, help high-speed investors profit simply by trading enormous numbers of shares, even if they buy or sell at a modest loss.
"It's become a technological arms race, and what separates winners and losers is how fast they can move," said Joseph M. Mecane of NYSE Euronext, which operates the New York Stock Exchange. "Markets need liquidity, and high-frequency traders provide opportunities for other investors to buy and sell."
The rise of high-frequency trading helps explain why activity on the nation's stock exchanges has exploded. Average daily volume has soared by 164 percent since 2005, according to data from NYSE. Although precise figures are elusive, stock exchanges say that a handful of high-frequency traders now account for a more than half of all trades. To understand this high-speed world, consider what happened when slow-moving traders went up against high-frequency robots earlier this month, and ended up handing spoils to lightning-fast computers.
It was July 15, and Intel, the computer chip giant, had reporting robust earnings the night before. Some investors, smelling opportunity, set out to buy shares in the semiconductor company Broadcom. (Their activities were described by an investor at a major Wall Street firm who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his job.) The slower traders faced a quandary: If they sought to buy a large number of shares at once, they would tip their hand and risk driving up Broadcom's price. So, as is often the case on Wall Street, they divided their orders into dozens of small batches, hoping to cover their tracks. One second after the market opened, shares of Broadcom started changing hands at $26.20.
The slower traders began issuing buy orders. But rather than being shown to all potential sellers at the same time, some of those orders were most likely routed to a collection of high-frequency traders for just 30 milliseconds - 0.03 seconds - in what are known as flash orders. While markets are supposed to ensure transparency by showing orders to everyone simultaneously, a loophole in regulations allows marketplaces like Nasdaq to show traders some orders ahead of everyone else in exchange for a fee.
In less than half a second, high-frequency traders gained a valuable insight: the hunger for Broadcom was growing. Their computers began buying up Broadcom shares and then reselling them to the slower investors at higher prices. The overall price of Broadcom began to rise.
Soon, thousands of orders began flooding the markets as high-frequency software went into high gear. Automatic programs began issuing and canceling tiny orders within milliseconds to determine how much the slower traders were willing to pay. The high-frequency computers quickly determined that some investors' upper limit was $26.40. The price shot to $26.39, and high-frequency programs began offering to sell hundreds of thousands of shares.
The result is that the slower-moving investors paid $1.4 million for about 56,000 shares, or $7,800 more than if they had been able to move as quickly as the high-frequency traders.
Multiply such trades across thousands of stocks a day, and the profits are substantial. High-frequency traders generated about $21 billion in profits last year, the Tabb Group, a research firm, estimates.
"You want to encourage innovation, and you want to reward companies that have invested in technology and ideas that make the markets more efficient," said Andrew M. Brooks, head of United States equity trading at T. Rowe Price, a mutual fund and investment company that often competes with and uses high-frequency techniques. "But we're moving toward a two-tiered marketplace of the high-frequency arbitrage guys, and everyone else. People want to know they have a legitimate shot at getting a fair deal. Otherwise, the markets lose their integrity."
Mr. President, in America, where all are created equal, Wall Street technology has permitted the powerful to exploit loopholes that make some investors now "more equal than others." The most basic principle of a free market system is that anyone can transact goods at prices based on a free and open market, not based on some kind of insider status.
These practices fly in the face of Regulation NMS, which the SEC issued to guarantee that trades are executed at the best price as soon as orders become available. With flash orders, there just doesn't seem to be any guarantee of this anymore.
Mr. President, I call again for the SEC to act quickly to protect investors in four critical areas.
First, we need to implement a rule that provides the substantive protections removed when the Uptick Rule was rescinded in 2007.
Second, the SEC must end naked short selling: no one should be able to short a stock unless they have located specified shares of stock and obtained a contractual claim to borrow the stock in time for delivery. The SEC's announcement yesterday of plans for more discussion does not accomplish this. We need concrete action soon by the SEC.
Third, the SEC must prohibit the use of flash orders: no one should be permitted to use information asymmetry that permits high-speed computer trading to have an advantage over average investors.
Finally, the SEC should establish disclosure and transparency equality: the disclosure requirements that apply to pooled funds worth greater than $100 million should apply uniformly to all, including hedge funds, for both long and short positions. And the level of transparency for order flows should be the same for all.
Mr. President, I believe our new SEC Chairman is focused on these issues, and she is making progress on a number of fronts. But it is the job of Congress to urge regulators to fix problems. SEC Chairman Schapiro inherited an SEC that had made many mistakes. I respect the fact that Chairman Schapiro is working hard every day to right a foundered ship. The other commissioners are joining her in that task.
In closing, I implore the SEC once again to act urgently to fulfill its core mission: protecting investors. The reason protecting investors is so important is that by doing so the SEC ensures the credibility of the financial markets. If the SEC refuses to restore a level playing field, to rebuild investor confidence in our markets, then we in Congress will have to step in and do it ourselves. Protecting investors is too important to the nation, to the integrity of our financial markets, and to our economic recovery.
I say again that legitimate capital market and arbitrage functions have value, just like legitimate short selling has value. But exploiting an unequal playing field only skims our nation's wealth -- it does not create any wealth or value. Except for a privileged few. And that harms the integrity of our financial markets and in doing so threatens the very foundation of our economic well-being.
As Americans, we must have faith in our institutions, both markets and government, to believe that if we work hard and play by the rules, all will be treated equally. That is what is at stake, Mr. President. Our financial industry and capital markets can be a powerful engine for the American economy, but the SEC and Congress must work together to restore investor equality and the integrity and credibility of our financial markets.
###
kaufman.senate.gov/press/press_releases/release/?id=2D9BE80D-55B2-4D1B-B2C2-AA71B130E1A1
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Says we have unequal markets, which the SEC must restore: “Protecting investors is too important to the nation, to the integrity of our financial markets, and to our economic recovery.”
July 28, 2009
WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-DE) went to the Senate floor today to implore the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to address a range of issues that include "flash orders," naked short selling and the "uptick rule" in his continued effort to restore investor confidence in the stock markets.
"We have an unfair playing field that leaves us with, in effect, two markets: one for powerful insiders and another for the average investor," said Sen. Kaufman. "One market for huge volume, high-speed players, who can take advantage of every loophole for profit, and another market for retail investors, who must play by the rules and whose orders are filled without any special priority. This situation simply cannot continue. It is the financial equivalent of ‘separate and unequal.'"
"To use a baseball metaphor, flash orders allow some batters to pay to see the catcher's signals to the pitcher, while the rest of us don't see them," Sen. Kaufman continued. "Markets that permit a privileged few to have special access to information cannot maintain their credibility."
Kaufman also reviewed SEC progress to date on proposals to restore the substance of the prior uptick rule and to eliminate naked short selling. He deemed it "progress . . . but lacking a sense of urgency."
Full remarks, as prepared for delivery:
Mr. President, all Americans hope that the "green shoots" we have seen recently - evidence that the economy may be turning around - won't wither. One thing that will help make our recovery strong and sustainable is the return of investor confidence. That is why making certain that our financial markets operate fairly and openly is so important.
Mr. President, free and fair markets and democracy are America's two greatest pillars of strength.
Our financial markets have long been the engine of American growth and the envy of the world. Efficient and free capital markets are essential to all that makes America great: investment in private enterprise, the availability of capital to expand and grow our economy through innovation and new ideas, and the ability to save for retirement in hopes that investments will result in comfort in our later years.
But we have seen what happens when you take the referees off the field, when we fail to have clear and fair rules for everyone. It is the job of our democratic government to set those rules, and to keep the referees - our financial regulators - on the field.
I rise today because we continue to see that our financial markets simply do not operate on a level playing field for all investors. And that is a threat to the credibility of our financial markets and, as a result, to our country's economic well-being.
We have a unfair playing field that leaves us with, in effect, two markets: one for powerful insiders and another for the average investor. One market for huge volume, high-speed players, who can take advantage of every loophole for profit, and another market for retail investors, who must play by the rules and whose orders are filled without any special priority. This situation simply cannot continue. It is the financial equivalent of "separate and unequal."
Mr. President, I offer my colleagues three examples of this two-tier system, which undermines the fairness and efficiency of our financial markets.
First, today the biggest players on Wall Street are using their automated, high-speed trading programs to engage in short selling of stocks. Informed observers believe organized "bear raids" - short selling combined with coordinated "misinformation" campaigns - contributed to the demise of Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, key elements in the collapse of our financial markets last year. With the repeal of the uptick rule in 2007, and no substantial substitute in its place, the threat of such damaging manipulation is still with us.
Mr. President, since March 3 I have spoken frequently about the urgent need for the SEC to restore the substance of the uptick rule. This rule required investors simply to pause and to wait for an uptick in price before continuing to short sell. Without such a rule in place, investors who own those stocks are more vulnerable to hedge fund bear raiders.
So far, the SEC has initiated a rule-making and conducted on April 8 a Roundtable discussion among key experts on some kind of price test that could substantially replace the uptick rule for today's high-speed, high-tech markets. While that process has begun, we have yet to see it bear fruit.
Second, big market players can engage in naked short selling - selling stock for which they have no legal claim and which they often cannot deliver.
Since my first speech on this subject in March, I have come to the floor several times and co-authored letters with my colleagues about the need for the SEC to end naked short selling. In that abusive practice, traders bet on shares losing value: shares they have not borrowed - and in some cases never even intend to borrow - in time for settlement.
Yesterday, the SEC made permanent a temporary rule they had enacted last fall and proposed some new transparency measures. And the Commission announced plans for a Roundtable discussion on September 30, two months from now. The Commission will finally begin to discuss publicly the potential solutions that a bipartisan group of Senators and I have been urging: either a pre-borrow requirement or a centralized "hard locate" system. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation tells us that it has the capacity and the willingness to implement that system - but only if the SEC requires it through a rule.
That is some progress, Mr. President, but we need more urgency at the SEC to implement tougher rules that will stop naked short selling through an enforceable system. This is imperative, because the current "reasonable belief" standard is virtually unenforceable, even against those who engage in concerted action to manipulate prices downward. Yesterday's announcement by the SEC admits that the rule they made permanent yesterday has only reduced fails to deliver by 57 percent.
That leaves a lot of room for improvement. Why not have an enforceable system, such as that proposed last week by the seven Senators, that could end naked short selling once and for all? I am hopeful we will soon see movement on this.
Third, we have the most recent revelation of so-called "flash orders" by high-frequency traders. These allow exchange members who pay a fee to get a first look at share order flows before the general public. By viewing this buy and sell order information for just milliseconds before it goes to the wider market, these investors gain an unfair advantage over the rest.
Today, I join Senator Schumer in urging the SEC to prohibit the use of these flash orders, used in connection with optional display periods currently permitted by DirectEdge, Bats Exchange and NASDAQ
As the New York Stock Exchange complained to the SEC on May 28, selling flash orders for a fee provides "non-public order information to a select class of market participants at the expense of a free and open market system." To use a baseball metaphor, flash orders allow some batters to pay to see the catcher's signals to the pitcher, while the rest of us don't see them. We have to make an informed judgment with the normal amount of risk. Markets that permit a privileged few to have special access to information cannot maintain their credibility.
Mr. President, I ask: Is this really what is happening on Wall Street today? When millions of Americans have lost so much money in the stock market, do Wall Street actors continue to make record trading profits by exploiting loopholes using high-speed computers? William Donaldson, former Chairman of the SEC and the New York Stock Exchange, has said "This is where all the money is getting made . . . If an individual investor doesn't have the means to keep up, they're at a huge disadvantage."
As Senator Schumer wrote in his letter: "If allowed to continue, these practices will undermine the confidence of ordinary investors, and drive them away from our capital markets." America simply cannot afford this loss of integrity of its financial markets.
Amazingly, it is a loophole in current regulations that allows this unfair practice. This can and should be fixed immediately.
Flash orders, the uptick rule, and naked short selling are not just a list of complaints, I believe they are interconnected. They are interconnected by an unsupported faith in the religion of self-regulation and liquidity. That religion believes that no price is too high for deeper liquidity - maximizing the volume and frequency of transactions -- because it reveals the greatest amount of information about stock values. And there is one more article of faith - that innovation by market players is always beneficial.
When the financial markets were decimalized and the uptick rule repealed, the SEC and leading market institutions claimed that electronic trading and technology would lead to deeper liquidity and market efficiencies benefitting all investors. High-speed trading, sophisticated algorithms, high volume short selling - all have grown exponentially in recent years. MIT - our nation's greatest engineering school - sent 11 percent of its 2008 graduates to work on Wall Street. All this, some say, has led to deeper liquidity.
Mr. President, America was founded with a spirit of entrepreneurship and a celebration of economic innovation. There are so many things Wall Street does right, and historically Wall Street was built on a foundation of trust and credibility.
But America was also born from the principle of equal opportunity. While we should keep encouraging the kind of commercial ingenuity that fuels the prosperity of our financial markets, we must ensure that technology is not employed to advantage one small group over the rest. That is not what the free market is about.
Indeed, there is a place in our markets for high-speed arbitrage functions, because they can and have narrowed bid-ask spreads and lowered the cost of trading for all. High-speed arbitrage also helps price discovery and keeps the prices of similar assets traded in different markets more closely aligned.
When it comes to flash orders, however, I think most investors, even those who trade regularly, are waking up very surprised to learn that these practices are even permitted. Just as we were surprised last year to learn about the rampant extent of naked short selling. Many investors have been suspicious for years that insiders on Wall Street hold built-in advantages over average investors. Flash orders are a classic example of being taken aback not by what is illegal, but by what is legally occurring directly under the noses of our financial regulators and leading market institutions.
Since I began speaking out against naked short selling, I have heard from some of the biggest companies in America, who are concerned about the effects of naked short selling. But they do not want to speak out, because they fear that any hint of vulnerability they admit even privately to public officials will leak out and make them the target of predatory raiders.
I have also heard from investors around the country. They have complained that large broker-dealers are somehow permitted to trade ahead of most investors. These average and even sophisticated investors relate that, in their experience, they never seem to be able to execute trades at the best available published bid or asking price. They complain that large orders always seem to get a priority over their smaller orders. Until now, I never really knew what to makes of these claims.
In the New York Times this past Friday, on investor blogs for weeks now, and in a comment letter filed by the New York Stock Exchange on May 28, commentators have begun to explain how flash orders work to - quite literally - "pick the pockets" of the average investor. In essence, these traders get a very quick look at all pending orders in advance and, through technology, can trade ahead of those orders.
Mr. President, I ask consent that this article be read into the record.
July 24, 2009
Stock Traders Find Speed Pays, in Milliseconds
By CHARLES DUHIGG
It is the hot new thing on Wall Street, a way for a handful of traders to master the stock market, peek at investors' orders and, critics say, even subtly manipulate share prices.
It is called high-frequency trading - and it is suddenly one of the most talked-about and mysterious forces in the markets.
Powerful computers, some housed right next to the machines that drive marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange, enable high-frequency traders to transmit millions of orders at lightning speed and, their detractors contend, reap billions at everyone else's expense.
These systems are so fast they can outsmart or outrun other investors, humans and computers alike. And after growing in the shadows for years, they are generating lots of talk.
Nearly everyone on Wall Street is wondering how hedge funds and large banks like Goldman Sachs are making so much money so soon after the financial system nearly collapsed. High-frequency trading is one answer.
And when a former Goldman Sachs programmer was accused this month of stealing secret computer codes - software that a federal prosecutor said could "manipulate markets in unfair ways" - it only added to the mystery. Goldman acknowledges that it profits from high-frequency trading, but disputes that it has an unfair advantage.
Yet high-frequency specialists clearly have an edge over typical traders, let alone ordinary investors. The Securities and Exchange Commission says it is examining certain aspects of the strategy.
"This is where all the money is getting made," said William H. Donaldson, former chairman and chief executive of the New York Stock Exchange and today an adviser to a big hedge fund. "If an individual investor doesn't have the means to keep up, they're at a huge disadvantage."
For most of Wall Street's history, stock trading was fairly straightforward: buyers and sellers gathered on exchange floors and dickered until they struck a deal. Then, in 1998, the Securities and Exchange Commission authorized electronic exchanges to compete with marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange. The intent was to open markets to anyone with a desktop computer and a fresh idea.
But as new marketplaces have emerged, PCs have been unable to compete with Wall Street's computers. Powerful algorithms - "algos," in industry parlance - execute millions of orders a second and scan dozens of public and private marketplaces simultaneously. They can spot trends before other investors can blink, changing orders and strategies within milliseconds.
High-frequency traders often confound other investors by issuing and then canceling orders almost simultaneously. Loopholes in market rules give high-speed investors an early glance at how others are trading. And their computers can essentially bully slower investors into giving up profits - and then disappear before anyone even knows they were there.
High-frequency traders also benefit from competition among the various exchanges, which pay small fees that are often collected by the biggest and most active traders - typically a quarter of a cent per share to whoever arrives first. Those small payments, spread over millions of shares, help high-speed investors profit simply by trading enormous numbers of shares, even if they buy or sell at a modest loss.
"It's become a technological arms race, and what separates winners and losers is how fast they can move," said Joseph M. Mecane of NYSE Euronext, which operates the New York Stock Exchange. "Markets need liquidity, and high-frequency traders provide opportunities for other investors to buy and sell."
The rise of high-frequency trading helps explain why activity on the nation's stock exchanges has exploded. Average daily volume has soared by 164 percent since 2005, according to data from NYSE. Although precise figures are elusive, stock exchanges say that a handful of high-frequency traders now account for a more than half of all trades. To understand this high-speed world, consider what happened when slow-moving traders went up against high-frequency robots earlier this month, and ended up handing spoils to lightning-fast computers.
It was July 15, and Intel, the computer chip giant, had reporting robust earnings the night before. Some investors, smelling opportunity, set out to buy shares in the semiconductor company Broadcom. (Their activities were described by an investor at a major Wall Street firm who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his job.) The slower traders faced a quandary: If they sought to buy a large number of shares at once, they would tip their hand and risk driving up Broadcom's price. So, as is often the case on Wall Street, they divided their orders into dozens of small batches, hoping to cover their tracks. One second after the market opened, shares of Broadcom started changing hands at $26.20.
The slower traders began issuing buy orders. But rather than being shown to all potential sellers at the same time, some of those orders were most likely routed to a collection of high-frequency traders for just 30 milliseconds - 0.03 seconds - in what are known as flash orders. While markets are supposed to ensure transparency by showing orders to everyone simultaneously, a loophole in regulations allows marketplaces like Nasdaq to show traders some orders ahead of everyone else in exchange for a fee.
In less than half a second, high-frequency traders gained a valuable insight: the hunger for Broadcom was growing. Their computers began buying up Broadcom shares and then reselling them to the slower investors at higher prices. The overall price of Broadcom began to rise.
Soon, thousands of orders began flooding the markets as high-frequency software went into high gear. Automatic programs began issuing and canceling tiny orders within milliseconds to determine how much the slower traders were willing to pay. The high-frequency computers quickly determined that some investors' upper limit was $26.40. The price shot to $26.39, and high-frequency programs began offering to sell hundreds of thousands of shares.
The result is that the slower-moving investors paid $1.4 million for about 56,000 shares, or $7,800 more than if they had been able to move as quickly as the high-frequency traders.
Multiply such trades across thousands of stocks a day, and the profits are substantial. High-frequency traders generated about $21 billion in profits last year, the Tabb Group, a research firm, estimates.
"You want to encourage innovation, and you want to reward companies that have invested in technology and ideas that make the markets more efficient," said Andrew M. Brooks, head of United States equity trading at T. Rowe Price, a mutual fund and investment company that often competes with and uses high-frequency techniques. "But we're moving toward a two-tiered marketplace of the high-frequency arbitrage guys, and everyone else. People want to know they have a legitimate shot at getting a fair deal. Otherwise, the markets lose their integrity."
Mr. President, in America, where all are created equal, Wall Street technology has permitted the powerful to exploit loopholes that make some investors now "more equal than others." The most basic principle of a free market system is that anyone can transact goods at prices based on a free and open market, not based on some kind of insider status.
These practices fly in the face of Regulation NMS, which the SEC issued to guarantee that trades are executed at the best price as soon as orders become available. With flash orders, there just doesn't seem to be any guarantee of this anymore.
Mr. President, I call again for the SEC to act quickly to protect investors in four critical areas.
First, we need to implement a rule that provides the substantive protections removed when the Uptick Rule was rescinded in 2007.
Second, the SEC must end naked short selling: no one should be able to short a stock unless they have located specified shares of stock and obtained a contractual claim to borrow the stock in time for delivery. The SEC's announcement yesterday of plans for more discussion does not accomplish this. We need concrete action soon by the SEC.
Third, the SEC must prohibit the use of flash orders: no one should be permitted to use information asymmetry that permits high-speed computer trading to have an advantage over average investors.
Finally, the SEC should establish disclosure and transparency equality: the disclosure requirements that apply to pooled funds worth greater than $100 million should apply uniformly to all, including hedge funds, for both long and short positions. And the level of transparency for order flows should be the same for all.
Mr. President, I believe our new SEC Chairman is focused on these issues, and she is making progress on a number of fronts. But it is the job of Congress to urge regulators to fix problems. SEC Chairman Schapiro inherited an SEC that had made many mistakes. I respect the fact that Chairman Schapiro is working hard every day to right a foundered ship. The other commissioners are joining her in that task.
In closing, I implore the SEC once again to act urgently to fulfill its core mission: protecting investors. The reason protecting investors is so important is that by doing so the SEC ensures the credibility of the financial markets. If the SEC refuses to restore a level playing field, to rebuild investor confidence in our markets, then we in Congress will have to step in and do it ourselves. Protecting investors is too important to the nation, to the integrity of our financial markets, and to our economic recovery.
I say again that legitimate capital market and arbitrage functions have value, just like legitimate short selling has value. But exploiting an unequal playing field only skims our nation's wealth -- it does not create any wealth or value. Except for a privileged few. And that harms the integrity of our financial markets and in doing so threatens the very foundation of our economic well-being.
As Americans, we must have faith in our institutions, both markets and government, to believe that if we work hard and play by the rules, all will be treated equally. That is what is at stake, Mr. President. Our financial industry and capital markets can be a powerful engine for the American economy, but the SEC and Congress must work together to restore investor equality and the integrity and credibility of our financial markets.
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kaufman.senate.gov/press/press_releases/release/?id=2D9BE80D-55B2-4D1B-B2C2-AA71B130E1A1
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