New Texas Stock Exchange Takes Aim at New York’s Dominance

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by ajacobson, Jun 4, 2024.

  1. ajacobson

    ajacobson

    https://www.wsj.com/finance/regulat...nge-takes-aim-at-new-yorks-dominance-e3b4d9ba




    By

    Corrie Driebusch
    June 4, 2024 8:00 pm ET

    48
    A group backed by Wall Street heavyweights BlackRock and Citadel Securities is planning to start a new national stock exchange in Texas, aiming to take on what they see as onerous regulation at the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq.

    The Texas Stock Exchange, which has raised approximately $120 million from individuals and large investment firms, plans to file registration documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission later this year, CEO James Lee told The Wall Street Journal. The goal is to begin facilitating trades in 2025 and host its first listing in 2026.

    The exchange is aiming to tap in to disaffection with increasing compliance costs at Nasdaq and NYSE and newer rules like one setting targets for board diversity at Nasdaq. Backers of the TXSE, as it is known, pledge it will be more CEO-friendly.

    Also behind the move is a shifting U.S. corporate landscape, with dozens of companies moving to states with more favorable regulatory and taxation policies. Texas is now home to more Fortune 500 companies, including Exxon Mobil, AT&T and American Airlines, than any other state. Goldman Sachs broke ground last year on a Dallas campus that it said could house more than 5,000 employees.

    “Dallas has become one of, if not the most, dominant financial centers in the country, if not the world,” Lee said.

    For months, talk has been swirling in trading communities about an upstart, “anti-woke” exchange launching in Texas. Lee says the exchange is apolitical.

    TXSE will be entirely electronic, but it plans to have a physical presence in downtown Dallas, said Lee, a Texan who has worked in finance and trading for around three decades. The exchange plans to compete for primary and dual listings. The TXSE also hopes to attract listings of exchange-traded products.

    Getting the new exchange off the ground would be no mean feat. NYSE and Nasdaq have an effective duopoly in U.S. corporate stock listings. Other exchanges, including IEX and Cboe Global Markets, have tried to break into the stock-listings business but they have gained little traction. The Long-Term Stock Exchange, which was approved by the SEC in 2019, has two listings.

    Decades ago, there were dozens of regional stock exchanges outside of New York, but they either shut down or were acquired by larger players. The Boston Stock Exchange, the Chicago Stock Exchange and the Philadelphia Stock Exchange are among those that were folded into the parent companies of the NYSE and Nasdaq in the last 20 years.

    [​IMG]
    The New York Stock Exchange effectively operates a duopoly alongside Nasdaq for U.S. stock listings. PHOTO: PETER MORGAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Attracting trading volumes to a new exchange is also challenging. Traders often direct orders to exchanges that have the greatest volumes. TXSE hopes its backers will help.

    Citadel Securities is one of the world’s biggest electronic-trading firms, and BlackRock is the world’s largest asset-management firm. BlackRock and Citadel Securities have a history of backing upstart exchanges, including MEMX, which handles between 2% and 3% of the stock market’s volume, according to Cboe data.


    Upstarts also benefit from SEC rules that effectively force large brokers to link to every exchange—even ones that have small market share—and pay for connections and market data.

    This isn’t the first attempt to bring more financial business to the Lone Star State. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, met with exchange officials in 2020 to pitch a move by their electronic-trading centers to the state from New Jersey, which at the time was considering a tax on financial transactions. The move never materialized.

    The newly formed Texas Business Courts, established as an alternative to the Delaware Court of Chancery system, is another sign of the state’s growing stature, Lee said.

    The courts are center stage right now as Elon Musk’s Tesla holds a shareholder vote on whether to move its incorporation to Texas from Delaware.

    “Never incorporate your company in the state of Delaware,” Musk tweeted after the Delaware Court of Chancery struck down his multibillion-dollar pay package earlier this year.
     
    Cam12, murray t turtle and MarkBrown like this.
  2. BMK

    BMK

    Corrie Driebusch (WSJ) wrote:

    Their website is hilarious. Click on "Listed Companies" for a good laugh.

    I think the real concept here is that eventually Texas will secede, and then the Texas Stock Exchange will be beyond the reach of US regulatory authorities.

    Texas will be the new Grand Cayman.

    It's the New Wild West.
     
  3. S2007S

    S2007S

    Getting closer to 24 hr trading...
     
  4. schizo

    schizo

    Let's see if there will be a civil war on Wall Street first. By the look of it, Citadel and BlackRock are clearly gathering their foot soldiers. But do they have the balls to bring in tanks and planes?
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  5. TSLA will be the first Major company to join that exchange followed by a SpaceX IPO to really get the ball rolling away from the NYSE/Nas

    It’s great news.
    More competition, lower fees, and a big F.U. to woke bs and progressive shit hole NYC.
     
  6. BKR88

    BKR88

     
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  7. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Sounds ....... of anti-woke idiocy.
     
    Lou Friedman and comagnum like this.
  8. Better idea would be to create competition to CME/CBOT/ICE.

    I have enough of their BS fee policies.
     
    SimpleMeLike, nitrene, schizo and 3 others like this.
  9. Citadel is the last thing I would want involved in a new exchange.
    Someone who currently uses their special position in the market to milk money out of regular people (payment for order flow) is now building an exchange? No thanks.

    We need a new exchange focused on serving the needs of:
    • Companies that want investment
    • Investors looking for investments
    We have too many middlemen, and too much leverage.
     
  10. The monopoly of the NYSE is a vestigial artifact from the practice
    of physical exchange of security certificates and either gold coins, or FIAT paper backed by gold. Young males (runners) were hired to physically make the deliveries for all the trades.
    But in 2024 we don't even have physical certificates.
    So the runners have been replaced by DTC Corporation and network connections.
    Sure, move the whole thing to Texas. Why not?
    With all the crime in NYC, eventually there will be attacks on DTC.
    That will be a terrorist attack nearly as bad as the Trade Towers.
    And I'm not saying anything those miscreants don't know about.
     
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2024
    #10     Jun 5, 2024
    birdman and murray t turtle like this.