Got it. Thanks.
So only buy and hold serves the American people. Liquidity is a terrible thing.
Perhaps next they will propose to outlaw selling until age 67 and then RMDs after 70.5.
Yes, that's how they think.
Got it. Thanks.
So only buy and hold serves the American people. Liquidity is a terrible thing.
Perhaps next they will propose to outlaw selling until age 67 and then RMDs after 70.5.
Here's a change that just happened
The line "serving the american people" is key. We (traders) are going to get slammed soon
SEC Adopts The T+2 Trade Settlement Cycle
On March 22, 2017, the SEC adopted a rule amendment shortening the standard settlement cycle for broker-initiated trade settlements from three business days from the trade date (T+3) to two business days (T+2). The change is designed to help enhance efficiency and reduce risks, including credit, market and liquidity risks, associated with unsettled transactions in the marketplace. Acting SEC Chair Michael Piwowar stated, "[A]s technology improves, new products emerge, and trading volumes grow, it is increasingly obvious that the outdated T+3 settlement cycle is no longer serving the best interests of the American people." The change amends Rule 15c6-1(a) prohibiting a broker-dealer from effecting or entering into a contract for the purchase or sale of a security that provides for payment of funds and delivery of securities later than T+2, unless otherwise expressly agreed to by the parties at the time of the transaction.
To be honest I really have no understanding on what really constitutes chargeable non-display fees. It seems to depend on how aggressive your broker or platform views the rules, which are hard to understand.
If I subscribed to a data service, even via Api I could simply state that it feeds my UI. Case closed. There is no way for them to verify. Hence it would not be enforceable nor would it be equitable if some are exempt and others not.
This is how the NYSE enforces the fee. NYSE make us provide a list of clients that use an API and NYSE data. If we don't comply, they send us a bill. Bloomberg says they have 325,000 subscribers globally. If 10% use an API, that is 32,500*$9000=$292.5mm/month. Bloomberg is not going to pay that. I'd say that is the immediate cause for the letter. Bloomberg has known about this for over a year.
Bob
Well they have done something and said no to the exchange. You guys just fucked the customer and are in bed with greedy and inequitable market participants. How else should we see this please? If NYSE asked for 5 mln per month you would equally have just passed it on to clients instead of having used common sense that something is totally wrong and fishy here. Sorry mate, however you turn the page, your company doing nothing and just silently complying leaves a very bitter aftertaste about where you guys are standing. Basically "shut up, don't ask, don't tell, as long as we are out of the picture let others get it up the ass".
Robert has helped ET to understand this issue since the first posts about this in October, maybe even before:
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/non-display-fees.303379/
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/non-display-fees.301156/
It's true that his firm hasn't filed any complaint and DTN did. Reading this tweet, seems no one wanted to be the first to complaint:
I'm not exactly sure why firms are afraid to be the first to complain.
I'm for sure that next time I'm going to let Eric Hunsader know issues like this. He seems very involved in market transparency issues and such.
Robert has also helped a lot explaining how his firm has been asked to identify non-display users, regardless whether his firm is greedy or not.