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Seventh
Annual Netcentricity Conference |
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The Transformation of Financial Markets
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April 27, 2007
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Howard
Frank, dean of the Smith
School of Business welcomed
attendees. |
Characterized by expanded access,
rapid and ubiquitous trading, reduced
reliance on physical marketplaces,
today’s financial markets represent both
globalization and consolidation of
markets in an ever-changing environment.
On April 27, 2007 distinguished members
of the finance community and renowned
scholars from the University of
Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of
Business finance and decision and
information technology faculty gathered
to assess the forces driving change in
financial markets at the Smith School's
Seventh Annual Netcentricity Conference.
Howard Frank, dean of the Smith
School of Business, in his welcome to
attendees, discussed his personal
involvement with the NASDAQ’s original
computer system, and the immediate and
immense increase in traffic and load it
experienced when it went live. “As soon
as people get a chance to use an
instrument that makes their work more
efficient and effective, they use it,”
he said, referring to the rapid
proliferation of technology in every
sector of business.
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The keynote speaker
was Samuel Gaer, chief
information officer of New York
Mercantile Exchange, Inc. (NYMEX). |
Rise of the Machines
Keynote speaker Samuel Gaer, chief
information officer of New York
Mercantile Exchange, Inc. (NYMEX),gave
a sweeping historical overview of the
rocky course of technology adoption in
the finance industry. He traced the
development of modern trading technology
from the time of the 1987 stock market
crash, a watershed event that indirectly
resulted in the rise of the modern
day-trader. Gaer discussed the
disruptive effects of technology and the
way it changed the trading landscape.
The biggest change in the last few
years has been the migration from
primarily floor-based trading to
electronic trading. On a global basis,
more than 50 percent of trading is done
electronically, and Gaer reports that on
some days NYMEX conducts almost 80
percent of its trades electronically.
Today’s trading floor is bristling
with formidable technology, from dense
wireless networks to real-time trading
software to a complex distributed
infrastructure. But Gaer says that
technology is becoming key to the future
success of the finance industry.
“Finance used to be a very non-tech
business, but lately a spectacular
change has taken place,” said Gaer.
“Millions of dollars hang on a company’s
ability to have a millisecond advantage
over its competitors.”
To achieve this advantage, the
industry is pushing the physical limits
of technology, with exchanges measured
not just in milliseconds but
microseconds. Gaer predicted a “rise of
the machines,” as algorithmic trading
systems programmed by humans begin to
replace flesh-and-blood traders.
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Albert
“Pete” Kyle, Charles E.
Smith Professor in Finance,
Smith School |
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Michael
Richter, executive vice
president of development at
Lime Brokerage, LLC |
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Vasant Dhar,
professor and head of
information systems at NYU's
Stern School of Business |
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Robert L.D. Colby; deputy
director at the U.S.
Securities & Exchange
Commission's Division of
Market Regulation |
Speakers & Panels
Albert “Pete” Kyle, Charles E. Smith
Professor in Finance, spoke about the
economic and financial theories behind
these new fast markets. Kyle, one of the
world’s preeminent experts in the
economics of financial trading, related
today’s networked markets to the cotton
farmer’s marketing cooperative operated
by his father in West Texas in the
1970s. It was an early electronic market
networked by phone lines and a bulky IBM
360; the market connected far-flung
cotton gins and cotton farmers and
involved a simple auction system similar
to eBay. So the technology to create
electronic fast markets have been in
existence for decades, said Kyle, but
only recently have financial markets
become computerized.
In looking at the history of the
computerization of financial markets,
Kyle discussed several seminal papers
over the last 30 years that shed light
on the financial theories behind current
market behavior.
Kyle also discussed the changes in
recent financial markets and pondered
the differences between the market’s old
profit model, which is a mutualized
private club where member traders make
profits from a playing field weighted in
their favor, to the recent development
of demutualized public companies.
“Electronic exchanges may be able to
realize significant cash flow from low
fees charged to active electronic
traders,” said Kyle. “Huge volume with
low fees could be a profit model that
works.”
Michael Richter, executive vice
president of development at Lime
Brokerage, LLC, spoke on algorithmic
trading and its impact on electronic
markets. Vasant Dhar, professor and head
of information systems at NYU's Stern
School of Business addressed the
question, "Has the transformation in
financial services already
happened?"
Robert L.D. Colby; deputy
director at the U.S. Securities &
Exchange Commission's Division of Market
Regulation, discussed the challenges of
regulating fast markets. Colby gave
three reasons why we need market
regulations: externalities in the market
(individuals have a propensity to take
on more risk than is beneficial, he
explained); market opportunities
on an individual basis can't achieve the
same benefits as on a societal level;
and to preserve competition.
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Bruce
Weber (left), professor and
area chair at London
Business School. |
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Albert
"Pete" Kyle, Smith Chair
Professor of Finance, Karen Furst,
policy analyst with the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, and Joel
Hasbrouck, Kenneth G. Langone Professor
of Business Administration
and professor of finance at
NYU's Stern School of
Business. |
Panel
Discussions
The conference played host to two
panel discussions. Bruce Weber (left),
professor and area chair at London
Business School, and Hank Lucas, Smith
Chair in Information Systems at the
Smith School, tackled the topic, "How
Long Can Technology Postpone the
Inevitable: The NYSE Moves to an
Electronic Market."
In the afternoon panel, Karen Furst,
policy analyst with the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, Joel
Hasbrouck, Kenneth G. Langone Professor
of Business Administration and professor
of finance at NYU's Stern School of
Business, and Albert "Pete" Kyle, Smith
Chair Professor of Finance, took on "The
Consolidation and Fragmentation in
Financial Networks."
Hasbrouck said, electronic markets
are transparent, and order interactions
are increasingly blind. The cancellation
rate is increasing -- 40 percent of
orders are pulled within two seconds;
there is a weak desire to trade and no
strong expectation that orders will
execute. Albert "Pete" Kyle, said that
the next generation of development will
be a customer trading algorithm for
before the order gets generated --
services to automate order placement
strategies. For example, explained Kyle,
my 20 customers can trade with each
other before they hit the trading floor.
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Hank
Lucas, a co-chair of the
conference and Robert H.
Smith Chair in Information
Systems. |
Conclusions
There
is a migration of major exchanges from
floor to electronic trading -- almost
every major exchange is 75 percent
electronic (NYSE hybrid 70%, CME 76%,
CBOT 80%, NYMEX 80% - peak). Markets
have to move or lose their franchise,
summarized Hank Lucas, a co-chair of the
conference and Robert H. Smith Chair in
Information Systems. You can use
technology to support an existing
business model, but can’t stop an
overwhelming technological disruption,
said Lucas.
The impact is more transparency, less
biased markets, and higher volume trades
as traders move down the demand curve:
high elasticity. The business model for
an exchange is changing. As traders
trade more aggressively, the market
becomes more efficient, but not
perfectly so, and exchanges can make
money on volume at a low cost. Virtual
market makers provide limited
information and quickly abandon the
market.
The
contrarian view states that existing
business models of financial services
firms are not at risk. Major firms are
building trading floors to have traders
all in one place with face-to-face
contact. Any transformation is in the
markets, themselves. One challenge is
interoperability and the number of
players involved in a trade.
Lucas wrapped up the conference
saying he believes that financial
markets have indeed been transformed by
information technology. "However," said
Lucas, "One man's transformation is
another's incremental change."
▓ Rebecca
Winner, Alissa Arford-Leyl, Office of
Marketing Communications
Photos by Vipul Bajpai
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