Quote from edbar:
Hi Landis,
The article above indicates that many banks are using automated traders to trade the markets, and also specifies that they are making tens of millions in profits each year. Dealing with the high-volume of stocks that they trade is what moves markets (up and down), not my 1000 shares or less. I see them as my competitor.
Best regards,
Ed
Ed,
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, and others have been using very robust electronic trading platforms and trading algorithms to execute baskets of stocks via program trading for their own accounts (usually via stock-index arbitrage) and for the accounts of their clients when a portfolio manager needs to adjust his portfolio, or for corporate treasury accounts that are seeking to make a certain risk-free return via stock-index futures arbitrage.
This is nothing new.
It has been going on for years!
In fact, program trading has been around for over 20 years.
I see absolutely NO correlation whatsoever with Goldman's research call on BTU ( which has to do with Asian exposure via there metallurgical coal operations in Australia ) and that of the automated trading platforms that you speak of.
BTU is no where near $45 per share, $40 per share, or even $35 per share.
The stock and coal sector trades off of the weakness in the Dollar. The stock is oversold and wants to bounce. That has nothing to do with Goldman Sachs.
By the way, research out of brokerages and investment banks is designed to generate order flow and commissions. Goldman recently initiated coverage on the Coal Sector just a couple of months ago with a NEUTRAL rating, actually favoring the Nat-Gas and E&P sector more (March 26th, 2009).
Of all the coal stocks in the sector, the Goldman analyst (Brian Singer) was bullish on Arch (ACI) due to their position in the Powder River Basin and had it as the
lone BUY in the sector that he rated as Neutral.
The other day, he came out and downgraded ACI to Neutral and Upgraded BTU to a Buy. BTU has just as much Powder River Basin exposure as ACI, but also has the caveat of seaborne met-coal exposure out of Australia to the Asian markets.
He's simply following the economic trends that he sees and the demand for met-coal (for steel ) from Asia.
To say that his change in the ratings of Arch Coal (ACI) and Peabody (BTU) is tied to Goldman's automated high-speed electronic trading programs is absolutely ridiculous.
The programs in the article that you cite are designed for "execution" purposes.