- Mar
- 28
- 2008
- 1:01 PM
'NYSE Plans to Introduce Reserve Orders for Electronic Entry'
- By: Ray Pellecchia
- File Under: NYSE
News is just out that in response to customer interest, the New York Stock Exchange plans to introduce in the coming months two types of Reserve Orders for electronic entry. Excerpt from the news release:
“This is about providing our customers with greater choice and flexibility in how they access our market,” said Lawrence Leibowitz, Executive Vice President, U.S. Markets and Global Technology. “We’re continuing to advance the NYSE market model by focusing on our clients’ interests and developing new solutions such as Reserve Orders to serve their needs."
Choice and flexibility are getting to be the major themes here, as well they should. The more traders I meet -- via the blog or in person -- the more I see that their interests and needs are incredibly diverse, which makes more important our approach: providing a broad range of ways to find and access liquidity.
Here are the Reserve Order information sheet, 100-stock pilot list, and the technical specification.
I'll keep you posted on this as we head toward launch, as well as any other market developments. In the meantime, happy Friday. My on-call jury duty is over -- a total non-event. Hope you have a great weekend. A little trivia before you go back to whatever you were doing:
Today in NYSE History
28 Mar 1985 -- Ronald Reagan became the first U.S. president to visit the NYSE while in office.
That must have been something to see. Sorry I got here too late to catch that one.
Also, August A. Busch, Jr. was born on this day in 1899 (died 1989). His NY Times obit nicely recounts the life of a great marketer who built his family business into the world's largest brewery. Worth reading, so you can think of him next time buy a share of BUD or hoist a Bud. (Speaking of liquidity.)


Comments
Not to take away from the big news on reserve orders, but there are some cool photos and videos of Reagan's historic floor visit - http://www.nyse.com/about/history/1173354276796.html
by Danielle Gustafson on March 28, 2008 1:14 PM
And inverted rates for high volume customers to boot! Well done.
by Jamie Selway on March 31, 2008 4:20 PM
Maybe I'm just a bit of a cynic, but this is kind of like a 3rd world country touting how they just got color TV. At this point, reserve orders are not an innovation -- they are something everyone else has been offering for a long time, and NYSE is *finally* catching up. Your systems are still the slowest, so you'll really have to do better if you want to get your market share back.
by Phil Anderer on April 2, 2008 1:31 PM
Phil -- You're correct that these solutions are new only to our market. I do think it's important that we're finally listening to customers and providing these order types, and that's why I'm touting them. You're also right about speed; we're working on that as well.
PS -- Nice moniker. Don't worry, I won't tell your wife.
by Ray Pellecchia on April 2, 2008 4:49 PM
what is the difference between these new reserve orders and what i am seeing now on the dot when orders sit on the book for a few hundred shares or more and continue to fill beyond what is posted.
thanks,
by josh on April 4, 2008 11:39 PM
Josh -- The new Reserve Orders can be entered by any member firm; currently, Reserve Orders in our market can be entered only by specialists and floor brokers.
There are a number of possible explanations of what you describe:
-- Reserve Orders from specialists and brokers;
-- Repeat trades at the quote, due to elected "cap" orders (percentage or go-along orders);
-- Additional interest arriving immediately after an order initially executes;
-- Order partially executes here, and balance gets routed away and executed (wouldn't appear on the tape as an NYSE print, but the customer would get multiple fills beyond the published quote size).
Hope that's of some help. Thanks for writing, Josh.
by Ray Pellecchia on April 8, 2008 11:39 AM
Ray,
Whut a wonderful and semple sit you have! It is the bust site evar!!!!!!!
Has the pilot program started now?
Also, can you explain what this means from Phase 2:
"In addition, floor brokers interested in trading in size will be able to probe this order type on request and in a fully auditable fashion."
This seems to contradict the notion "completely dark" liquidity. How exactly will floor brokers be able to see that reserve size exists? And auditable by whom? ...to what end?
Thanks,
Ian
by Ian Cognito on April 8, 2008 3:43 PM
Ian -- First, LOL -- thanks for picking up on my post about spammish style. Nicely done.
The pilot program has not yet started. We anticipate it will start later this month, and will let you know as soon as we have a definite date.
Sorry our language may be confusing on this. The completely dark orders are not probe-able; it's the Block Reserve version that can be probed.
On the Block Reserve Orders(SM), only the published amount will be visible on the Display Book. If a floor broker looking to trade "size" asks the specialist for a "market look," the specialist can quickly pull up an on-screen template -- the same one used for entering "manual" trades. The template will show aggregated reserve interest, which the specialist can then share verbally with brokers. That feature is designed to facilitate getting block orders executed.
Usage of these looks will be auditable by NYSE Regulation's Market Surveillance group, for regulatory purposes.
We hope that customers who have asked for these types of reserve features will find that the new order types offer them more choice in trading our market.
by Ray Pellecchia on April 9, 2008 11:22 AM
Thanks Ray -- I appreciate the clarification. I'm looking forward to the hidden/reserve orders.
Ian
by Ian Cognito on April 9, 2008 4:07 PM
Hope readers appreciate the beauty of Ian Cognito asking about hidden/reserve orders. : )
by Ray Pellecchia on April 9, 2008 4:35 PM
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