Archive for September, 2007

Ask the NFA!

Friday, September 14th, 2007

In an attempt to stem the rising tide of criticism, whether warrented or not, the National Futures Association (NFA) will be sponsoring a membership forum on Oct. 15 from 2 pm – 4 pm at the UBS Conference Center in Chicago. This is an important step for the self regulatory agency that was in the eye of the storm that became the Sentinel Management Group demise. Members have criticized how the Sentinel SRO allowed Citadel Investment Group to buy up the Sentinel portfolio with the best quality paper for a discount, hurting those clients in that portfolio.

Philly parties and so do markets

Friday, September 14th, 2007

At a cocktail party and dinner buffet at the National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame in Chicago’s Little Italy neighborhood, the Philadelphia Board of Trade (PBOT), which is under the auspices of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (PHLX), celebrated its products. It was a gorgeous Chicago evening, and the view from the terrace of the Hall of Fame was spectacular.

But in between hearing about the quick growth of the PHLX World Currency Options that hit records that day (open interest hit 239,903), and talk about about its smaller sister, the retail-oriented FX futures at the PBOT, which recently named IKON Global Markets as a market maker and Fortis Clearing Americas as the first clearing member, a few former bond floor brokers lamented the death of the floor. When asked what has changed, other than their move to management at prospective banks, they said market moves have “extended,” because “there’s no one to stand in front of the hedge funds.” They said that it wasn’t that trends were changing, it’s just that a market could move 10% more in one direction just because it had to slow down pretty much by itself, like a train with no brakes. They added that hedge funds move all in the same direction. And with the move to electronic, they didn’t see that change anytime soon.

Bye-bye BEX

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

The Boston Stock Exchange (BSE), a mutual organization that manages or regulates multiple ventures, announced Sept. 5 that it has discontinued the operations of the Boston Equities Exchange (BEX).

BEX was launched in August 2005 as an electronic stock exchange but failed to gain market share, according to BSE. BEX did not see significant gains during a summer of record trading volume.

The BSE will continue to be active in the marketplace and will support its remaining ventures including the regulation of the Boston Options Exchange (BOX).

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Forex options the new forex

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME Group) is protecting its turf when it comes to trading currencies as other exchanges amp up their currency offerings — both the Philadelphia Board of Trade (PBOT) and the Tokyo Financial Exchange (TFX) came out with currency news at the end of August.

The CME Group, which is a regulated marketplace for foreign exchange trading, announced it plans to offer electronic trading for weekly forex options on futures with American-style expiration. As of Sept. 10, the weekly options on the following currencies will be available virtually 24 hours a day on the CME Globex electronic trading platform: the Euro, the Japanese yen, the British pound, the Swiss franc, the Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar.

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Dog days become bull & bear days

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

The dog days of summer used to be synonymous with slow markets where traders and clerks could take time off or cut out early assured that there was not much activity to miss. And while not as laid back as Europe, where some industry personnel where know to take the entire month off, the month of August usually coincided with quiet range-bound markets.

Not this year as the subprime crisis coupled with other market fundamentals have produced volatile markets and numerous volume records. The Chicago Board Options Exchange reported that this August was the busiest month in its 34-year history with 105,551,741 million contracts traded; a 94% increase over last August and 21% increase over July’s record pace. It was the first time ever that CBOE traded more than 100 million contracts in a month. The entire equity options industry also set a record in August of 294,211,443 contracts, up 83% year on year.

The record volume was not contained to equity options as CME Group also reported record trading volume in interest rate and equity index products. Average daily volume at CME Group for August was 14.9 million, up 78% fro August 2006.

Burgenstock 2007: HSBC Exec Defends Dubai Regs, Projects Growth

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

Swedish exchange and technology group OMX has launched a volley of mud against Borse Dubai, which last month launched an unsolicited $4 billion all-cash bid for OMX, challenging Nasdaq’s $3.7 billion cash-and-share offer, and now former LME boss and current head of Middle East business development for HSBC David King has defended not only the Dubai Borse but the Dubai regulatory regime.

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Burgenstock 2007: Retail Dominates in Dubai; Eurex Repo Business Surges

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

The Swiss Futures and Options Association (SFOA) has kicked off its 28th Burgenstock Conference, this time from Montreux, on the southern tip of Lake Geneva, while the Burgenstock resort in the mountains above Lake Lucerne is renovated.

The focus so far has been pretty macro – a stream of folks from around the world touting the dynamism of the Emirate of Dubai, which is sponsoring many of the events this year. Former LME boss David King, who is now business development boss at HSBC’s Middle East operations, pointed out two interesting tidbits: first, that the bulk of the products being traded in Dubai are oriented to the retail sector; and second, that products based on Islamic finance are proliferating there.

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