SpecialistMan - by John Bogle

Discussion in 'Order Execution' started by Tea, Sep 19, 2003.

  1. Tea

    Tea

    Here is an excerpt from a commentary in today's Wall Street Journal by John Bogle, founder of the Vanguard Group. Good insight on the specialist system - i.e. the pre-tax profit margins of 35% to 60% for low-risk trading. For a hedge fund to generate that kind of return they have to risk the house.

    __________________________________________________

    SpecialistMan

    by John Bogle



    "Well-deserved attention has been focused on the $140 million compensation package received by Richard Grasso, the recently departed chairman of the New York Stock Exchange. Undoubtedly there will now be significant changes at the NYSE Board. But the real question is why that Board, with representatives from the most sophisticated firms on Wall Street, agreed to pay its chairman such a rich compensation package. There is only one conclusion: He was worth the money.

    * * *
    While the NYSE bills itself as "a private company with a public purpose," there is no doubt that its chairman's most important role is to protect the interests of its members. And no interest is more important than the protection of the trading profits derived by the NYSE's floor-based specialists. Thanks in large part to Mr. Grasso's efforts, the NYSE has, until recently, enjoyed a remarkable level of prestige, providing the cover necessary to protect its inherently unfair and inefficient trading system.

    Every security traded on the NYSE is assigned exclusively to a specialist firm. The specialist ultimately sees every order in its assigned stocks submitted to the exchange either electronically or through brokers on the floor. But while the NYSE grants specialists a privileged position in order to maintain a "fair and orderly market" (which, curiously, is nowhere defined), the specialist is also permitted to simultaneously trade for his own account -- an obvious conflict of interest.

    NYSE rules attempt to limit the specialist's ability to improperly use inside information by limiting specialists to trading only when there is a temporary disparity between supply and demand, buying when there are no other buyers and selling when there are no other sellers. Yet if specialists really traded only when there is an absence of buyers or sellers, one would think they would lose money.

    The fact is that specialists are profitable, in Samuel Johnson's words, "beyond the dreams of avarice." A forthcoming study by Precision Economics will reveal that publicly traded firms with specialist units last year enjoyed pre-tax profit margins ranging from 35% to 60%. Labranche, the largest NYSE specialist, generated more than a quarter of a billion dollars in revenues, almost entirely from trading for its own account on the floor. Pretty profitable for trading only when nobody else wants to!

    Since trading is a zero-sum game, these profits come at the direct expense of investors such as large institutions, which desperately want competitive alternatives to the NYSE but are reluctant to publicly complain about the fundamental unfairness of the NYSE model. After all, institutions have to do business with the NYSE because there are no real competitive alternatives.

    The NYSE has perpetuated myths that mislead regulators and the investing public into believing that specialists serve the public. For instance, the NYSE asserts that investors need specialists because without them, "who is going to be there to buy or sell when nobody else wants to?" The NYSE claims that the specialist reduces market volatility by acting as the buyer or seller of last resort.

    Think about that: Envision SpecialistMan, emerging amongst the bedlam of a fast falling stock with a giant "S" on his chest. Quickly calming the crowd, he exclaims "I will buy from every one of you because it is my duty, even though I will lose money." They sell their shares to SpecialistMan, praising him for his willingness to selflessly provide liquidity, regardless of the impact on his profits.

    While this notion is ridiculous on its face, it is still put forward to defend the NYSE specialist when nearly every other major instrument is traded completely electronically without anyone being given an informational advantage. The truth is that when a stock like Enron starts falling, just like everyone else, SpecialistMan gets out of the way."


    "We need not worry about the specialist abusing his privileged position, we are assured, because the NYSE's cardinal principle is that the investor's interest is always served first. But it's easy to get around this tenet. Even though there is no imbalance between supply and demand, the specialist simply trumps the price of investor orders. If a specialist is holding investor orders to buy IBM for $10.00, he cannot buy at $10 until all investor orders at $10.00 are executed. But he can buy at $10.01. With his informational advantage over everybody else concerning the likely direction of a stock's price, the specialist will outbid investors only at the most advantageous moments.

    Ironically, the specialist is rewarded for this exclusive opportunity. The NYSE calls this "price improvement" because the investor trading with the specialist receives a better price. The NYSE actually brags about the frequency of price improvement, which really represents how often the specialist uses his informational advantage (what most of us would otherwise call insider information) to make a trading profit and disadvantage investors.

    * * *
    These points should not be a revelation. Why would NYSE members pay approximately $2 million for the privilege of standing on an old, crowded floor all day unless they gained some sort of advantage? Membership has its privileges. But does the public benefit from a structure that grants privileges to a select few even though, thanks to technology, we now have more efficient ways to trade securities?

    SEC rules ban floor brokers from trading for their own accounts. Specialists, however, are exempted from this prohibition because they are assumed to be performing a public service, an assumption belied by the facts. So let's be clear. While the NYSE Board structure needs to be fixed, and fixed promptly, we investors ought to focus most of our attention on the profit center of the NYSE, its specialist system."
     
  2. i have been a supporter of and like trading the specialist system but i believe this fiasco has given those who want to end it the opening they need. i believe the specialist system is doomed now. it will probably take a year or two but if i owned a seat on the nyse i would sell it fast.
     
  3. Sure, those poor institutions are too shy to complain.

    It is pretty obvious that there are lots of individuals (members of the "public") who specifically prefer to trade NYSE stocks for the way they are traded.

    And the other question is: Exactly how will it benefit the public if one institution (the large investor) gains a small advantage at the cost of another institution (the specialist)?

    "The public" consists of 90% trading and investing illiterates who have no choice but to give their money to someone and more or less hope that he will earn them some decent return. They don't care whether their "small fee" goes toward the specialist's, the broker's or the bank's profit.
     
  4. just as the Buggy Whip Lobby crapped it's pant's one hundred years ago.

    I bet (and hope) that they are crapping theirs at the old and crusty NYSE.

    Follow the money, and who benefits?

    I have been trading 80% Nas and 20% listed for years and really do prefer an open and fair electronic auction over a specialist and his floor buddies.

    Thank you for a great post on this subject
     
  5. i second that!!!!! this article is right on the money. grasso's whole responsibilty was to preserve the insider trading advantages of the specialist while giving the appearance of serving joe six pack. lol lol lol did anyone else see the interview with Putnam, CEO of ArcaEx???? he basically accused grasso of strong arming clients, i.e. threatening them with regulatory action if his auditors discerned they were using the ecn's more than his monopoly exchange (NYSE)!!!!!!
     
  6. I guess he finally pissed off somebody to the extent that they were not playing the game anymore. Must have been somebody at LaBranche that had nothing to lose by leaking this insider stuff. Knowing full well, it would just kill him politically.

    Rome is crumbling...
     
  7. Who cares, all these people are bitching about pennies. Trading is a dumb game. The real money is in long term work. What is a penny when your upside if 500 pts over 10 years?

    I am willing to pay a penny, or even a dollar for the liquidity to move 10k shares fast if I wanted to.
     
  8. it has nothing to do with losing a penny....if you think this, then you are not a listed scalper. bottomline it is about integrity...why do you think these pension fund managers are so pissed off. they move a hell of a lot more shares than you do.
     
  9. Preferring to trade longer term, p2's point is well-taken.

    However, if it were only me and p2 giving up a penny in order for the specialists to maintain an orderly market, then I wouldn't grouse. But we aren't the only ones. All of us give it up. Everyday, all day. That is a lot of money being taken out of our collective pockets and put into theirs.

    As C' said, it is about integrity. Yes I know that I know the rules of the game before I play it blah blah blah, but if the rules tilt the playing field instead of level it, then they should be changed.
     
  10. I like NYSE getting price improvements everyday!
     
    #10     Sep 20, 2003