bid price (the price they pay for stocks) and ask price (the price they sell the stocks
for). They also receive commissions on trades.
Although NASDAQ, the NYSE, and the other exchanges are heavily regulated,
they are still public for-profit businesses. They have shareholders, directors, and offi-
cers who are interested in market share and generating profits. This means that the
NYSE is vigorously competing with NASDAQ for the high-volume stocks that gen-
erate the big fees. For example, the NYSE has been trying to entice Microsoft to leave
the NASDAQ and list with them for many years.
Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs)
ECNs have been challenging both
NASDAQ and the organized exchanges for business in recent years. An ECN is an
electronic network that brings together major brokerages and traders so that they
can trade between themselves and bypass the middleman. ECNs have a number of
advantages that have led to their rapid growth.
• Transparency: All unfilled orders are available for review by ECN traders.
This provides valuable information about supply and demand that traders can
use to set their strategy. Although some exchanges make this information
available, it is not always as current or complete as what the ECN provides.
• Cost reduction: Because the middleman and the commission is cut out of
the deal, transaction costs can be lower for trades executed over an ECN.
The spread is usually reduced and sometimes eliminated.
• Faster execution: Since ECNs are fully automated, trades are matched and
confirmed faster than can be done when there is human involvement. For
many traders this is not of great significance, but for those trying to trade
on small price fluctuations, this is critical.
• After-hours trading: Prior to the advent of ECNs only institutional traders
had access to trading securities after the exchanges had closed for the day.
Many news reports and information become available after the major
exchanges have closed, and small investors were locked out of trading on
this data. Since ECNs never close, trading can continue around the clock.
Along with the advantages of ECNs there are disadvantages. The primary one
is that they work well only for stocks with substantial volume. Since ECNs require
there to be a seller to match against each buyer and vice versa, thinly traded stocks
may go long intervals without trading. One of the largest ECNs is Instinet. It is mainly
for institutional traders. Instinet also owns Island, which is for active individual trades.
The major exchanges are fighting the ECNs by expanding their own automatic
trading systems. For example, the NYSE recently announced changes to its own
Chapter 13 The Stock Market
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Direct+ order routing system and merged with Archipelago to give it an established
place in this market. Although the NYSE still dominates the American stock market in
terms of share and dollar volume, its live auction format may not survive technolog-
ical challenges for many more years.
Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs)
Exchange traded funds (ETFs) have become the
latest market innovation to capture investor interest. They were first introduced in
1990 and by 2007 over 400 separate ETFs were being traded. In their simplest form,
ETFs are formed when a basket of securities is purchased and a stock is created
based on this basket that is traded on an exchange. The makeup and structure are
continuing to evolve, but ETFs share the following features:
1. They are listed and traded as individual stocks on a stock exchange. Currently,
all available offerings are traded on the American Stock Exchange.
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