ssianho
2021-07-21

Good read

@Nms141319$AMC院線(AMC)$ 分析任何一支股票都要有信息和一定的數據做支持,所以我才能從一月建倉,持倉和加倉到現在,這是一遍很好的知識信息。 再次強調:沒有買賣建議,純粹覺得好才分享。 In-Depth: Citadel Connect and Dark Pools Uncovered Before dark pools, institutional investors had to trade in blocks of shares outside trading hours to avoid upsetting the market. Now, the utility found within dark pools is so high that some market makers have embedded them within their operations. There are certainly some benefits here in terms of increased liquidity, but there’s another side of the coin as well. Throughout 2021, retail traders have uncovered significant short positions held by hedge funds in a number of stocks. Naked short selling is suspected by many retail traders to be involved. At this point, hedge funds have collectively lost $12 billion—so far. One of the latest developments in this saga is Citadel Connect, a dark pool operated by Citadel Securities. Citadel Securities and Citadel Connect If you haven’t been following the WallStreetBets saga across multiple Senate Banking Committee hearings, here is a brief recap. As the largest Designated Market Maker (DMM) on the NYSE, and accounting for 47% of US-based retail trading volume, Citadel Securities LLC also accounted for a significant portion of Robinhood’s Q1 2021 revenue thanks to Robinhood’s PFOF (payment for order flow) business model. PFOF is a highly controversial practice because it tends to cause conflict of interest, which is why it is illegal in many Western nations (the UK, Canada and Australia). Current SEC Chair Gary Gensler noted some venues for its abuse on June 9th. “Payment for order flow raises a number of important questions. Do broker-dealers have inherent conflicts of interest? If so, are customers getting best execution in the context of that conflict? Are broker-dealers incentivized to encourage customers to trade more frequently than is in those customers’ best interest?” In the same statement, Gensler further noted that around 9% of January’s trading volume was executed on alternative trading systems (ATSs), commonly referred to as dark pools. Befitting their moniker, dark pools have the effect of occluding the market’s resolution. In stock market jargon, the aggregate quote reporting on the bid-ask quote spread – the National Best Bid and Offer (NBBO) – is skewed, as noted by Gensler himself: “First, as evidenced in January, nearly half of the trading interest in the equity market either is in dark pools or is internalized by wholesalers.” Internalization means that the order is not routed to the market maker but the broker itself fills the order from its inventory of shares. For instance, Citadel Securities had to pay a $22 million penalty in 2017 for “misleading statements suggesting that it would provide or try to get the best prices it saw for retail orders routed by other broker-dealers,“. Continuing with dark pools, Gensler then concluded the following: “Dark pools and wholesalers are not reflected in the NBBO. Moreover, the NBBO is also only as good as the market itself. Thus, under the segmentation of the current market, nearly half of trading along with a significant portion of retail market orders happens away from the lit markets. I believe this may affect the width of the bid-ask spread.” Citadel Securities owns and operates one such dark pool out of currently 50 in the US, called Citadel Connect. What is a Dark Pool and Can it Be Abused? Alternative trading systems (ATSs) or dark pools are private exchanges that have liquidity benefits but can also obscure trades. Together with internalizers, they account for over 40% of the global equity market. Dark pools gained traction after 2005, following the SEC’s adoption of the Regulation NMS (National Market System). NMS modernized the stock market to make it as we know it today. Therefore, dark pools are completely legal and regulated. However, they are called dark because orders don’t show up on the exchange’s order books. The obvious purpose of this feature is to stabilize the market, so that when large orders from institutionalized investors are placed other market players are not alerted. Otherwise, with the order size in the open – on the lit market – other participants would be able to trigger a downward price shift. By preventing that from happening, dark pools increase liquidity and market efficiency. Nonetheless, the same way dark pools eliminate transparency by design, they can also obscure conflicts of interest. Here are some of the historical examples which demonstrate the ways in which dark pools have been abused: On October 3, 2012, SEC charged eBX LLC for failing to protect the confidential information of its subscribers, allowing third parties to use the information. On June 6, 2014, SEC charged a New York broker for mishandling confidential information and using it for marketing purposes. On January 15, 2015, SEC charged UBS Securities LLC for failing to disclose an order type that it pitched exclusively to market makers. On August 12, 2015, SEC charged ITG and AlterNet Securities for operating a secret trading desk and misusing confidential trading data. On January 31, 2016, SEC charged Barkley Capital and Credit Suisse for numerous violations, among them executing 117 million illegal sub-penny orders. On September 14, 2018, SEC charged Citigroup for misleading dark pool users and routing orders in other trading venues. On November 7, 2018, SEC charged ITG and AlterNet Securities again for similar violations as the last time. This gives you an overview of the abuse range occurring in dark pools. With that said, as a private exchange, each private pool has its own rules and limits. For example, some only allow large orders or blocks, while others focus on high-frequency trading (HFT) which is how dark pools have grown in popularity in the first place. The most common abuse found in dark pools is the so-called front running. With the knowledge that a trader is about to execute a trade, another trader can trade the stock – sell or buy – first and then sell it to satisfy the original request—at a profit. Is Citadel Connect a Dark Pool? Numerous reliable reports suggest Citadel Connect is indeed a dark pool. Interestingly enough however, Citadel Connect is not registered as an ATS, nor does it report its trading volume to FINRA, which is overseen by the SEC, per a 2015 Reuters report: “Unlike Apogee, Connect is not classified as an “Alternative Trading System” and does not report volumes to FINRA.” In the same article, Reuters had reported that Citadel Securities aims to shutter its previously registered dark pool called Apogee in 2015, as Citadel Connect had already outperformed it by five times. The market maker itself refers to Connect as an “off-exchange trading” or “Immediate-or-Cancel order (IOC) platform”. Among its offering are the following features: Deep unique principal liquidity Minimizing market impact Smart order routing These features align with the purpose of dark pools. However, the SEC Chair Gary Gensler differentiated between dark pools (ATSs) and off-exchange wholesalers, observing that: “That leaves about 38 percent, most of which was executed by off-exchange wholesalers. Just seven wholesalers accounted for the vast majority of this group….”Within the off-exchange market maker space, we are seeing concentration. One firm has publicly stated that it executes nearly half of all retail volume.” As you can see, the market is all about the flow of information and which entities have positioned themselves to best tap into this data flow. “…as a significant and growing share of retail orders are routed to a small, concentrated group of wholesalers, certain market makers have more data than others. As we’ve seen in many other parts of our economy, a few central actors gain advantage through the increasing use of data — whether in search, e-commerce, or in this case, the data from transaction flows.” By Tim Fries
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