Quote from Nordic:
Dude, That's my point. At the end of the month, IB ( or who-ever your execution agent is) will end the month on the plus side in fills vs. cancels. Therefore they will not absorb any cancel fees.
:eek:
Quote from resinate:
Right... and unless the so-called throughput costs more than .20 per order they make money on each cancel as the cboe cost is 1.00.
Quote from def:
even if you are correct in your assumption that we don't go over the threshold, you miss a few points:
1. isn't this a catch 22? If we drop the fee wouldn't cancels/modifys increase dramatically
2. do you know the policy on the ISE and other exchanges which charge? according to our last routing stats, the majority of our orders go to the ISE. the cboe is 4th in line.
Quote from def:
even if you are correct in your assumption that we don't go over the threshold, you miss a few points:
1. isn't this a catch 22? If we drop the fee wouldn't cancels/modifys increase dramatically
2. do you know the policy on the ISE and other exchanges which charge? according to our last routing stats, the majority of our orders go to the ISE. the cboe is 4th in line.
David,Quote from def:
...
2. do you know the policy on the ISE and other exchanges which charge? according to our last routing stats, the majority of our orders go to the ISE. the cboe is 4th in line.
Yes,Quote from stock777:
I wonder is they haven't had more of an effect than we think. MM's depend on certain , let's call them strategies, to get the price to where they want to do business. In the good old days, they would move stick 1/8, 1/4, maybe 2 or 3 of those levels. Now, they can dance around within 3-10 cents for the same effect.
I don't think this affects large moves, only the scalping type moves.