Massive surge in trading volumes, say brokers.

Discussion in 'Trading' started by Grandluxe, Apr 25, 2014.

  1. TD Ameritrade, E*Trade Report Large Jumps in Volume in First Quarter
    April 23, 2014 7:23 p.m. ET


    Discount brokers TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. AMTD 0.00% and E*Trade Financial Corp. ETFC -1.19% on Wednesday reported big jumps in daily trading volume in the first quarter from the same period a year ago. TD Ameritrade posted a 30% jump to a record 492,000 revenue-generating trades a day, while E*Trade said average daily volume rose 33% to 198,000.

    Charles Schwab Corp. SCHW -0.89% last week reported a 13% increase in volume to 337,300 trades a day.

    Executives attributed the growth to strong returns from stocks in recent years, more widespread adoption of mobile-trading technology and the lack of alternatives to stocks in a period of historically low interest rates. More market volatility during the first quarter added to trading volume, executives said. The increase in trading "is broad-based," said TD Ameritrade Chief Executive Fred Tomczyk. "It's everywhere. It's very robust retail engagement." The increase in retail activity started in the fourth quarter of last year and picked up steam in the first quarter.

    Gabe Mercer, a 22-year-old student who is taking a semester off to develop a mobile application, said he "stumbled" onto the stock market in March while reading Twitter and watching YouTube videos. "It seems like a great time to be in the market," he said. Mr. Mercer, who lives in Mooresville, N.C., said he has invested $500 via a TD Ameritrade account. He has made a handful of trades so far, he said, and hopes to become a full-time trader one day.

    Thomas Peterffy, CEO of Interactive Brokers Group Inc., another discount brokerage, said his firm also is seeing more trading from all segments, including active traders, longer-term investors and financial advisers who trade stocks on behalf of clients.

    http://online.wsj.com/news/articles...0001424052702304788404579520152382616262.html

    One of the best times to be a trader. Awash in liquidity.
     
  2. IAS_LLC

    IAS_LLC

    Its times like these where I wish the SEC "Pattern Day Trader" thing didnt exist.... lot of fish to fry out there...
     
  3. Bob111

    Bob111

    I guess this mean top of the market
    not sure what those brokers see(i would trust their words as muchs one can trust national association of Realtors about real estate situation), but I can't see a single evidence of it in stocks volumes.
     
  4. Bob111

    Bob111

    +1. Pdt is an absolute nonsense, but again-i see no fish. My fill ratio is all time low, sitting at about 20%. This means that out of 100 signals, where I was right about certain price level-stock did traded at my price and I got no fill.
    20 out of 100
    ps-and those 20s that I got-all loosers. Trading is no fun anymore
     
  5. Occam

    Occam

    If you mean you're trying to add liquidity, that would not be surprising. It seems that internalization and retail brokerages selling their order flow to "wholesalers" (Knight, Citadel, UBS, Citi, and the former E*Trade) has risen to an all-time high over the past couple of years -- over 50% "dark" for many stocks, but most of that is not "true" dark pools (such as the now-lauded IEX), but rather brokers trading against their clients and/or diverting the flow to the wholesalers.

    Fortunately, the SEC and the exchanges' interest in this matter seems to be building.
     
  6. Maybe time to call it a day?
    Only job where you can go in and come out, out of pocket.
     
  7. d08

    d08

    The price has to trade through your price, not at your price. How do you verify this? by looking at Time & Sales?
     
  8. Sergio77

    Sergio77



    That's the best signal that a bear market is coming. Seeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeell.........
     
  9. Get plunged in. Probably one of the best time for traders now according to TD America and Charles Schwab. So much volume flying around.
     
  10. Bob111

    Bob111

    These days you either get nothing, if you are at the bid(unless price is about to go against you in a very short term) or if you hide your order-they will trade trough someplace else. At much better prices and you wil get nothing(or worse-1-2shares)
    Not sure how many times I have to repeat this. I'm getting this from what I see through the day and comparing it to s tick data after market close.
     
    #10     Apr 26, 2014