Quote from Don Bright:
Well, since you have decided to point out my "errors" I would like to invite you to an online chat session to discuss in detail your comments.
1. If you think about it, what difference does it make to Bright Trading what type of execution you use...we make money no matter what, right?
We do better when our traders make money, stay with us for a lifetime, and continue to prosper, make sense to you? That is the only reason for our trading about 90/10 NYSE at this point in time. Openings still account for about 25% of all BTraders profits, and the blue chips make for great pairs trading.
2. I didn't say IB "does" trade against you, simply that retail brokers can (and many do). I respect Timber Hill and IB, and they are the only retail firm I have ever recommended to retail traders.
3. Please provide documentation that IB can smart route to GS private liquidity pool, that would be something I would really be surprised to see if it is true. Especially since this is brand new even for us.
You keep using the words "cheat" and "steal" - now, one must ask, why do you think the financial world would participate in this den of inequity? It's a market place that has provided liquidity for centuries, nothing more, nothing less.
You realize, of course, that our traders can use any technology available....and it really doesn't matter since their "edge" is the ability to take part in strategies that most traders cannot...those that are "capital intensive" - (again, openings, pairs, M&A, etc.). Their success has little or nothing to do with how the orders are executed...if we run across a "bad" specialist, we simply change stocks (very rare, but it does happen).
I really don't see any reason for all the hostility, we all just want to "play the game" and make some money and, as in all business ventures, take responsibility for' our own actions (especially necessary in the trading business).
So, if you want to hash it out on a public forum, I'm glad to...and who knows, perhaps others could learn from an adult discussion about such matters...... perhaps Baron could put it together....if not, no big deal, I'm not trying to "win" the argument.....simply to discuss how we feel about things....
All the best,
Don
Don,
I'm sure you can see that I am being systematically harassed by personal attacks on this thread. This harassment started before my last posting directed to you. The harassment I have been suffering was the source of hostility which I regret directing toward you, and for which I apologize. I saw your inaccurate statements as aiding and abetting the harassment, and so I did not do a good job of separating you from the individuals who were harassing me. I hope this answers your question as to the source of the hostility. I'm not claiming to have an excuse for my hostility, I am only trying to answer your question about its source. It is, of course, clear that you did not harass me, and I think it is obvious that you have way too much class to harass people.
I would have preferred responding to you much sooner, but I have been greatly distracted by the harassment, which has consumed much of the limited time I can afford to devote to this discussion thread. I am ridiculed for spending too much time on this thread, and then also, by the very same people, for failing to respond to specific matters.
I would also like to add that despite our disagreements, I believe you add a great deal to EliteTrader, not just as an advertiser, but also in terms of the substance of its discussions. I regret any role I may have played in discouraging your continuing participation in this thread.
I am concerned, however, about the wording of your posting, because it doesn't seem to acknowledge that your statements about IB were incorrect. You made incorrect statements about IB failing to disclose trades against customers, selling equity order flow, internally matching customer equity orders, and failing to provide access to Goldman Sachs equity liquidity. I think it would be a good idea for you to acknowledge your errors. I don't think you want it to appear that you are unfairly knocking your competitors.
It also seems to me that you did inaccurately state that IB, specifically, was trading against customers and representing those trades as NYSE trades, when in fact those trades did not execute at NYSE, and that this might be why I received delayed fills and poor fill prices.
Quote from Don Bright:
Retail orders are routed to the brokerage firm (IB in your case) by regulation, and therefore may not even make it directly to the NYSE (although it may show on your sheets that it traded there, it may have been simply "put on the tape" there)...your T&S will show NYSE, but it also may show "as of" - many variables involved in retail trading. You're right that you may get better executions on an ECN in this case.
Don
I can't reconcile this with your later statement that you never said IB trades against customers. IB, through its Timber Hill affiliate, does actually trade against its customers, but it does so with various protections, including full disclosure that the trade was executed by Timber Hill and not by NYSE.
I can answer your request for documentation as follows. You can request documentation from either Goldman Sachs, or from Nasdaq, that Goldman Sachs is a registered Nasdaq market-maker, providing, through Nasdaq's SuperIntermarket facility, liquidity for NYSE and AMEX issues. Here is a link showing that Goldman Sachs participates:
http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/trader/hottopics/currentlp.pdf
The next piece of documentation you will need is something from Interactive Brokers, showing that IB does provide both direct-routed and SMART-routed access to a list of market centers, including Nasdaq, for NYSE and AMEX issues. You would need to request such documentation from IB, because I don't know where to find clear documentation of this fact, but I do have first-hand knowledge that it is true. I, while trading through IB, have personally had numerous orders for NYSE-traded issues SMART-routed to Nasdaq's SuperIntermarket.
I think that NYSE has succeeded in cheating and stealing, in recent years, because of outdated government-enforced laws and rules, like the present trade-thru rule, which give NYSE an unfair advantage over competitors. The trade-thru rule, for example, greatly interferes with other market centers in their executions of NYSE and AMEX traded issues. I think that Regulation NMS, the new trade-thru rule, will be a step forward in this regard. Regulation NMS is not yet even in effect, but it is already forcing positive changes on NYSE. I don't think it was a coincidence that NYSE made a deal with ARCA immediately after Regulation NMS was approved by the SEC.
I'm not sure I understand the purpose of your suggesting an online chat session. Why would that be superior to continuing our discussion in this thread, and including others as well? I don't consider myself an expert, and I fear that without being able to take my time in my responses during a chat, my participation may have little value or substance. Perhaps you were referring to the goal of excluding disruptive and abusive behaviour from a discussion. If we agree that this would be desirable, then I would ask that you work with me to complain to Baron about the outrageous abuse we have seen in this thread. I think that our joint complaint would carry far more weight than just my own, and that it would probably be successful and enable us to continue this highly educational thread, free of interference.