BrokerDealers To Trade For Free in IEX Stock Exchange Proposal: The Death of Dark Pools?

As reported by Bradley Hope in today’s WSJ, upstart equities trading venue IEX, the “dark-pool buster” profiled in the Michael Lewis book “Flash Boys,” announced today a new market structure scheme that would provide commission-free execution for orders submitted by brokerdealers.

According to the proposal, which is “expected to be submitted imminently” to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with IEX’s plan to move from its current status as an ECN (electronic communications network) and towards becoming a full-blown stock exchange, broker-dealer orders would receive priority in the IEX order book, meaning those orders would jump to the top of the order book if the price to buy or sell a stock was at least equal to the prevailing orders entered by non broker-dealers aka buy-side investors that include high-frequency trading firms, mutual fund firms and retail investors. In addition to brokerdealer orders being provided priority over other same-priced orders sent to the platform by non BD’s, broker-dealers would be able to execute commission-free.

In a move that is purposefully intended to disrupt the current market structure status quo and challenge the viability of loosely-regulated and so-called “dark pools,” in which pricing transparency is purposefully hidden so as to mitigate gaming of orders submitted by large institutions, IEX is embracing an approach that has become widely-embraced in Canada’s equity marketplace, whose primary equities trading is administered by TMX Group, that country’s largest stock-exchange provider. Noted TMX Group CEO Thomas Kloet, “The virtue of having more bids and asks consolidated in a few order books, rather than scattered across dozens of venues [such as what takes place in US markets) makes markets more transparent and provides for greater price efficiency.”

The IEX proposal comes close on the heels of recent events in which dark-pool operators have been accused by regulators and law enforcement agencies of various charges, including accusations filed against Barclays PLC by New York State Attorney General which alleges Barclay’s misleads its clients about the way its dark pool favors high-tech “high frequency traders.” Barclay’s system “Barclays LX” was the industry’s largest dark pool used by a broad universe of investors and competing banks, until those charges were filed last month. Since that time, Barclay’s has supposedly experienced a large exodus of clients using their platform, presumably because of concerns they too will be on the receiving end of New York AG subpoenas.

 

 

 

BrokerDealer Community Faces New Audit Standards By Public Company Oversight Board

PCAOB Issues Guidance for Broker-Dealer Auditors

BrokerDealer.com/blog update courtesy of extracts from accountingtoday’s news article

accounting todayThe Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) has released staff guidance to help auditors of brokers and dealers registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission to plan and perform audits in accordance with PCAOB standards as mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act and SEC rules.

T he Dodd-Frank Act amended the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to, among other things, give the PCAOB oversight authority for the audits of broker-dealers registered with the SEC.

“To enhance investor protection, broker-dealer auditors must now meet PCAOB requirements,” said PCAOB chairman James R. Doty in a statement. “This guidance is tailored to help auditors of smaller broker-dealers develop a cost-effective, scaled approach to their audits.”

Last year, the SEC revised Exchange Act Rule 17a-5 to entail, among other things, audits of broker-dealers was conducted in accordance with PCAOB standards. In October, the PCAOB implemented an auditing standard along with two attestation benchmarks that apply to broker-dealer audits. Then in February, the SEC issued an order to take approval from the PCAOB’s new auditing and attestation standards for the audits of brokers and dealers.

The amendments of SEC and standards of PCAOB are effective for fiscal years ending on or after June 1, 2014. Former to the effective date, those broker-dealer audits were taken under general auditing standards.

In order to help auditors with the transition, the staff guidance helps to find relevant requirements for SEC-registered brokers and dealers audits, attestation processes, and provides helpful insights on the application of PCAOB standards to these processes. Furthermore, the publication shows up major prerequisites of SEC Rule 17a-5 and PCAOB standards.

“Auditors of broker-dealers are now subject to new requirements, including the requirement to apply PCAOB standards,” said PCAOB chief auditor Martin F. Baumann. This publication discusses how audits can be scaled, based on the size and complexity of the broker-dealer, to apply PCAOB standards and fulfill their important role of helping to protect customers of broker-dealers.”

Publication is available at PCAOB’s official website

Video Camera Maker GoPro Shares #GPRO Surge As Company Raises $450 Million in Deal Led By Top BrokerDealers

A BrokerDealer.com blog special report:

Photo Courtesy of US News

GoPro Founders Cheer IPO. Photo Courtesy of US News

IPO market investors who were able to secure shares from their brokerdealers that were floated today on the NASDAQ Stock Market by video camera maker GoPro were rewarded as the company’s stock surged more than 30% in the company’s first day of trading on the public stock markets.

Investment Bankers J.P.Morgan, Citigroup and UK’s Barclays were the lead underwriters. Selling group members included the broker dealer industry’s Mischler Financial Group, the securities industry’s oldest and largest firm owned and operated by service-disabled veterans.

GoPro is the largest consumer-electronics IPO since battery company Duracell International Inc.’s 1991 debut raised $433 million, according to data provider Dealogic. Gillette Co., now a unit of Procter & GambleCo., bought Duracell in 1997.

GoPro is the latest consumer business to cash in on investor demand for U.S. stocks, which has given the likes of microblogging service Twitter Inc., perfume maker Coty Inc. and theme-park operator SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. a window to float shares in the past year and a half.

At the offering price, GoPro’s selling shareholders will generate proceeds of $427.2 million, based on the 17.8 million shares being sold. The company will command a market value of nearly $3 billion based on the 123.1 million shares that will be outstanding after the deal.  Trading on the NASDAQ Stock Market under ticker symbol “GPRO”, the shares soared GoPro shares rose $7.73, or 32 percent, to $31.73 in afternoon trading Thursday after rising as high as $33 earlier.

 

SEC Wants To See More Transparency from BrokerDealers Trafficking in Bonds

SEC Chair Mary Jo White is shifting her aim and gunning for increased pricing visibility and transparency from the Wall Street brokerdealers engaged in providing pricing and trade execution in the $14 trillion dollar secondary marketplace for trading corporate and municipal bonds.

According to the Scott Patterson in his WSJ weekend journal column,  :

European Pressphoto Agency

European Pressphoto Agency

“…To even the playing field, Ms. White suggested requiring public dissemination of the best buy and sell orders generated on private electronic networks for corporate and municipal bonds that are accessed primarily by market insiders.

Currently, investors typically see prices only after a trade is executed.

“This potentially transformative change would broaden access to pricing information that today is available only to select parties,” Ms. White said in a speech at the Economic Club in New York.

The effort comes amid a broader push by Ms. White to erode some of the trading advantages enjoyed by certain large traders that aren’t available to most rank-and-file investors. In a speech two weeks ago, Ms. White vowed to ratchet up oversight of computer-driven trading, a push that could ultimately dull the edge such high-speed traders enjoy.

The bond market initiatives, while still in the planning stage, could deliver a blow to big Wall Street banks that dominate bond trading, while benefiting regular investors who have largely been shut out of the inner workings of the bond market, observers said. Wall Street’s fixed-income businesses already are being buffeted by new rules on capital and risk-taking, and a drop in client trading.

Fund managers who invest in corporate and municipal debt would be among the biggest beneficiaries of the move, because they would have a better idea about how much supply and demand existed in the market for bonds they want to trade…”

For the full story from the WSJ, please click here

Finra Fixing To Levy More Fines Against BrokerDealers

BrokerDealer.com blog post courtesy of extracts from the Wall St. Journal

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority aka Finra, the Wall Street watchdog charged with policing the brokerdealer community and overseen by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is considering tougher penalties for misconduct after criticism from an SEC official that its sanctions are too lenient.

finra penalties wsjIn the five years since the financial crisis, Finra, which is funded by the industry, didn’t discipline any Wall Street executives. It imposed fines of $1 million or more 55 times through 2013, compared with 259 times for the SEC, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. The SEC oversees a wider number of firms and range of conduct.

Susan Axelrod, Finra’s executive vice president of regulatory operations, said in an interview the watchdog would review its guidelines to make sure penalties are “meaningful and will have an impact.”

She rejected any suggestion its punishments have been insufficient, adding that Finra, as “the cop on the beat from Wall Street to Main Street,” should not be judged just on its biggest fines. “We’re going to bring the action against the individual broker in Des Moines, Iowa, that other regulators are not going to bring. That’s a key part of our mission.”