No, not that I know of.



Quote from vanilla2:
I know from an aquaintence/specialist on the amex that firms like sesquahanna do just that, mimick their best customers' activity. it is his full time occupation, monitoring his highest performing customers' activity for proprietary use.

Quote from DK_:
Maybe you misread vanilla2:
"I know from an aquaintence/specialist on the amex that firms like sesquahanna do just that, mimick their best customers' activity. it is his full time occupation, monitoring his highest performing customers' activity for proprietary use."
That is what I suggested must be "wildly illegal"
Quote from Lobster:
While I am reasonably sure that IB is not doing anything illegal or even semi-legal like datek used to, there is one thing that I have observed, and I believe it happens at the NYSE: Often times I see a trade the second after I put in my order, and it is exactly the price and size of my limit. Yet, I never get that fill. At first I was thinking IB gets the fill and decides later whether to allocate it to the customer account (mine) or to one of its own accounts (like datek used to, didn't they?). But when you think about it, such behavior wouldn't really make sense. It appears much more likely that someone at the NYSE (probably the specialist) is the one who executes the trade against "my" trading partner, but holds it in his own account while deciding whether to give it to me or not. He is almost allowed to do that, isn't he? I mean, he is SUPPOSED to trade based on order flow...
Quote from def:
vanilla, I can assure you that none of IB's affiliates do that or would even consider "reverse engineering" client flow. Keep in mind IB's proprietary trading affiliates are doing somewhere on the order of a couple of hundred thousand trades per day around the world. Not only is such a practice unethical and probably illegal, given our scope and scale of trading it is completely impractical.
Quote from def:
vanilla, I can assure you that none of IB's affiliates do that or would even consider "reverse engineering" client flow. Keep in mind IB's proprietary trading affiliates are doing somewhere on the order of a couple of hundred thousand trades per day around the world. Not only is such a practice unethical and probably illegal, given our scope and scale of trading it is completely impractical.