Quote from JuniorCTA:
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If their in-house trading system generates a buy signal when their clients happen to be selling, they shouldn't take the signal??
Quote from jeb9999:
"...TradeKing's prior clearing deposit of $100,000...has backed up the firm's approximately 200,000 retail customer accounts for more than two years, aTradeKing told the court."
Quote from Occam:
No, your order should be sent to a competitve market, which internalization is not. You'll never know what the competitve price would have been, if you're operating in an environment of internalization. It changes the dynamics and incentives of the order book. Many exchanges provide price improvement of their own (and generally much larger, measured in 1c increments rather than 1/100 of a cent), not to mention the fact that internalization disincentivizes liquidity providers from tightening the spread.
"Price improvement" from your broker internalizing you is nothing but muppet bait.
Quote from optionsgeek:
Yes, thank god for Peak6. With apologies to Churchill, the Penson acquisition is perhaps the least cynical act in history.
Quote from optionsgeek:
Really? Then why is it Trade King filing suit and not Broadridge I wonder?
Quote from def:
Occam,
You need to do your homework. IB has stated numerous times that we don't internalize. IB places significant resources into obtaining best execution for clients. Sure the potential exists but we actually post price improvement stats measured in $ terms determined by an independent group. The 606 stats also show this. So before you post false innuendo, do some real research.
Save your reply for another thread though as this is about the WSJ article on Penson, APEX and the additional margin they are seeking from clients.