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Equities Trading and The
Internet
Once upon a time there was no Internet. OK, now take a deep
breath. It's alright because there is one now. For several
decades (roughly from 1960 to 1990), large companies such as
Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley were able to trade among
themselves electronically, but these trades took place over
private networks.
In 1978, the Intermarket Trading System (ITS) opened for
business, providing an electronic link between the NYSE and
competing exchanges, enabling brokers to access several
markets. But still, only for the 'in-crowd'.
Then in 1994, Aufhauser Securities (now owned by Ameritrade)
created the first Internet trading system. As Internet trading
grew dramatically, companies developed systems allowing
individual investors to not only trade, but access information
once available only to those large companies.
The world has never been the same since.
Trading commissions fell to negligible territory. Twenty years
ago, it was common to pay $100 or more on a $1000 trade; online
trading fees are less than $10 today. Yet, despite the
considerable drop in prices, brokerages are making enormous
profits, thanks to the increase in trading volume.
Peak volume in 1824 on the NYSE was 380,000 shares, though less
than 10,000 was the norm in 1835. Unfair comparison, too far
back? Fine. In 1992 average daily volume was 200 million
shares. Today, it's over 1.6 Billion. Peaks as high as 3
billion have been seen.
Along with lower prices and increased volume, trading times
have shortened from an hour or half a day, to a few seconds.
And you wonder why the floor brokers are always yelling at one
another on the stock exchange.
Research, once available only to specialized analysts in large
brokerage firms, is now accessible to the average investor with
an online trading account - often for free. And the research
itself has grown from simple Earnings Per Share and Dividend
Yield data to a bewildering array of Relative Strength Indexes
(RSI), Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD), Bollinger
Bands and others even more arcane.
Networked trading, along with other computer technology, has
made exchanges international and in some cases global. Only a
few years ago the Amsterdam, Brussels, Lisbon and Paris
exchanges merged into Euronext - a single trading exchange for
countries with widely differing backgrounds. Efforts continue
to bring the London Stock Exchange into partnership with
Euronext or FWB (Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse, the major German
exchange), or both.
As a consequence of the emergence of merging exchanges, trading
has improved not only for members but the individual investor
as well. It isn't just citizens of the countries involved in
Euronext who can trade there. Exchanges the world over are now
open to almost any investor anywhere. Now anyone, not just
London's professional traders, can enjoy the effects of sleep
deprivation monitoring and trading on exchanges that cross
every time zone on the globe.
All this change, while difficult to absorb, has one overriding
goal and result - you can now make (or lose) a lot more money a
lot faster, in a lot more places, than your father. That ought
to produce at least a few interesting family dinner
conversations.
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