Tag:

buy-side

Latest Headlines

Latest Headlines

JPMorgan's electronic trading push

For all its heft, JPMorgan has been a Johnny-come-lately to the algorithmic big leagues. Advanced Trading notes that in Tabb Group's recent U.S. Equity Trading Report, JPMorgan ranked tenth based on

Dark pool controversy: Intelligence of smart order routers

It's no secret that the orders handled by the sell-side are getting chopped up into smaller and smaller pieces. That's been going on for years, radically changing the dynamic of block trading. But as

The future of Pipeline Trading Systems

The dark pool industry and the buy-side community are still pondering the scandal at Pipeline Trading Systems, which agreed last month to a cease and desist order to stop some shocking practices that

Deutsche Bank aims for better buy-side algos

It was a lot easier on the buy-side back when you traded with human beings. These days, the main liquidity providers tend to be super automated, faceless algorithm driven entities. You can either

Brokers offer better corporate access initiatives

There's a good reason why small agency brokers think they can win with corporate access soft-dollar offerings: the bulge-braket ( bulge bracket news) sell-side operations still focus mainly on large

Sell-side research tops buys-side

We noted recently that bulge-bracket firm research has lost some market share, as of late . But the news isn't all bad--at least when it comes to scoring sell-side research against buy-side research. A recent study from Harvard Business School and the University of North Carolina has found

Buyside on the rise, really?

There's been lots of talk about how the recent cataclysm has dealt the sellside a blow, to the benefit of the buyside. That's an easy way to look at the situation, and that's how it's outlined in  a piece from the Financial Times . At first glance, it does seem like the traditional sellside-

Buy-side OMS spending

Buy-side spending on order management systems will rise at a compound annual growth rate of 12 percent over the next five years, predicts TowerGroup. This is several percentage points higher than