The SEC has proposed to ban all unsupervised trading. This may be the end of retail trading as we know it. stay tuned
http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...pervised-access-to-stock-market-update1-.html
By Nina Mehta and Jesse Westbrook
Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Securities and Exchange Commission voted to propose banning a practice in which brokers provide investors with unsupervised access to a stock exchange or alternative trading system.
Chairman Mary Schapiro said so-called naked sponsored access, in which a customer bypasses the pre-trade controls of their brokers and access markets directly, may expose the market and firms that offer the service to too much risk.
âWe are concerned that order-entry errors in this setting could suddenly and significantly make a broker dealer or other market participants financially vulnerable within mere minutes or seconds,â Schapiro said at a hearing in Washington today.
Commissioners are meeting in Washington today to begin formulating the next round of stock market regulation, focusing on strategies used by professional investors, such as sponsored access and âdark poolâ trading venues. The agency voted 5-0 to approve the proposal.
Aite Group LLC, a financial services research firm in Boston, said in a December report that sponsored access represents about half of U.S. equities trading, with unfiltered access accounting for 38 percent. The SEC has been under pressure from Senator Ted Kaufman of Delaware and others to address concerns that so-called high-frequency trading firms could disrupt the market with trading that isnât properly monitored, such as through unfiltered market access.
Jeopardizing a Firm
http://www.businessweek.com/news/20...pervised-access-to-stock-market-update1-.html
By Nina Mehta and Jesse Westbrook
Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Securities and Exchange Commission voted to propose banning a practice in which brokers provide investors with unsupervised access to a stock exchange or alternative trading system.
Chairman Mary Schapiro said so-called naked sponsored access, in which a customer bypasses the pre-trade controls of their brokers and access markets directly, may expose the market and firms that offer the service to too much risk.
âWe are concerned that order-entry errors in this setting could suddenly and significantly make a broker dealer or other market participants financially vulnerable within mere minutes or seconds,â Schapiro said at a hearing in Washington today.
Commissioners are meeting in Washington today to begin formulating the next round of stock market regulation, focusing on strategies used by professional investors, such as sponsored access and âdark poolâ trading venues. The agency voted 5-0 to approve the proposal.
Aite Group LLC, a financial services research firm in Boston, said in a December report that sponsored access represents about half of U.S. equities trading, with unfiltered access accounting for 38 percent. The SEC has been under pressure from Senator Ted Kaufman of Delaware and others to address concerns that so-called high-frequency trading firms could disrupt the market with trading that isnât properly monitored, such as through unfiltered market access.
Jeopardizing a Firm