Internet
Wave Hits FX Trading Market
Wall Street & Technology;
With
an estimated daily volume of $1.5 trillion, the foreign exchange (FX) market is
the largest in the world. Historically, the world's largest commercial and
investment banks have dominated the FX, market, offering so-called interbank dealing spreads. However, in the past several
years, smaller firms have entered the industry, launching online FX trading
systems and offering smaller spreads to small and mid-size investors-including
hedge funds, money managers, corporate treasurers and private traders.
There
are many forex dealing services for different audiences. Some, such as GAIN
Capital and MG Financial Group, focus primarily on small-to mid-size hedge
funds and private investors, while others, like Reuters and EBS, target the interbank market. All,
however, offer or plan to offer customers the ability to deal directly from
live bid/ask prices 24 hours a day. Some of those vendors charge standard
commissions, while others lure clients with smaller spreads and attempt to
profit by processing large volumes of trades.
MG
Financial, GAIN, Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB) and MatchbookFX
are part of a group of vendors that are pursuing small-to mid-size buy-side
firms and individual investors. The New York-based MG Financial, founded in
1992, targets hedge funds, money managers, individuals, and small-to mid-size
institutions. Basically, that target group includes anyone with a portfolio who
is willing to speculate in the FX trading market, says director of marketing
and public relations, Roland Kaffaga.
MG
Financial, through its Deal Station 2000 system, allows FX dealers to trade
either directly or indirectly with each other. Clients of Deal Station 2000 can
deal directly with each other via the so-called Internet Brokerage System;
alternatively, clients can trade indirectly with their counterparts through MG's dealing desks.
GAIN,
founded in 1999, began beta trading in March and is scheduled to commence live
trading sometime this month. Mark Galant, ceo of the Warren, N.J.-based company, says GAIN will act
as a market maker, offering institutional and individual investors commission
free, real-time, 24-hour, Internet-based FX trading. The firm will execute FX
trades of all sizes; traders will be able to conduct transactions at the same
prices the interbank market typically provides
exclusively to large institutional clients. Galant
anticipates the company will execute "hundreds of trades per day" the
first few months of live trading, and thousands of trades per day after that.
The firm is mainly looking to snag small- to mid-size hedge funds and
individual investors.
CS
First Boston, on the other hand, has rolled out a Java-enabled, frontend workstation application in an attempt to garner
market share among small- to mid-size institutional investment firms. Dubbed PrimeTrade, CSFB's system covers
FX spot, forward and swap instruments.
Like PrimeTrade, MatchbookFX
is going after the institutional market--but also is attempting to build a
niche among sophisticated high-net-worth speculative traders. Minimum account
size for the system is $10,000, but most accounts are in the six-figure range.
"Basically, we're in the market for anyone who has traded highly leveraged
instruments or derivatives," says Director Joshua Levy.
Typical daily trading volumes on the MatchbookFX
network are usually about $100 million per currency pair offered.
In
contrast to the aforementioned vendors, EBS and Reuters target an entirely
different market: large banks. EBS, which caters to interbank
spot foreign exchange players, has more than 800 banks using roughly 2,500
workstations on a closed proprietary network. Those clients transact an average
daily volume of more than $90 billion on EBS' network.
Reuters,
which has been in the FX market for more than 20 years with its RMDS system,
has rolled out approximately 21,000 of its FX workstations globally. Recently,
the firm introduced its new Dealing 3000 line--its next-generation, interbank-market-oriented product line. "From direct
feedback we've received from Dealing and FX users, we have developed a more open,
flexible product," says Diane Domingues, a
marketing official working for Reuters' money and transaction systems group in
New York. "The 3000 line, [for example], runs on a WindowsNT
platform, which allows for a shared environment.
Just
as significantly, Dealing 3000 allows traders to view up to three different
workstations that provide real-time news and quotes--in addition to dealing
conversations and matching functionality. Traders also have the ability to
carry on 24 separate conversations at once, and send broadcast one-way messages
to lists that can have 100 or more counterparties.
Trade
Pricing
While
vendors in the FX market have different strengths and cater to a diverse array
of investors, they all share at least one thing in common: the ability to clear
trades.
On the MatchbookFX
network, which clears its own trades, buy and sell orders for any given
currency pair, which are always instantly dealable,
are displayed live on the network via Matchbook's
so-called Open Limit Order Book Dealing Platform. Regarding commissions, MatchbookFX allows the
traders to choose whether or not they wish to pay a commission. Limit orders,
or "passive" trades as MatchbookFX
terms them, no matter how close they may be to the market, are always
commission free. Only "aggressive" deals, which actually initiate a
trade similar to an "at-market" order, generate any commission
charge. There is a maximum commission of $15 per $100,000 traded for inactive
traders; active traders are charged as low as $5 per $100,000 traded.
Like MatchbookFX, MG Financial Group is a self-clearing organization. The firm has
a $10 round turn per unit trade fee, although accounts over $10,000 are not
charged commissions when dealing through the dealing desk.
GAIN,
which will also clear its own trades, plans to operate on margin trading from
day one. It will not collect commissions or charge fees. Galant
says the company is hoping to turn a profit as the volume of trades
increases. "Even on a 5 pip spread, you can make money," he adds,
"but only if you have good traders."
Reuters'
Dealing 2000 and 3000 systems also are self-clearing. Reuters provides clients
with various data feeds to integrate their trading information into P&L
systems, middle- and back-office systems, risk management services and database
archive systems. Customers pay a monthly subscription fee for the
conversational FX trading service, as well as a per transaction fee for the
electronic matching service.
Partnering
Versus Building
In addition
to having different pricing structures, some FX vendors have different
philosophies about buying and building technology. MatchbookFX, for its part, has relied on
partners to build up its system. In late 1999, MatchbookFX
incorporated Shadow Financial Services' clearance and settlement software into
its infrastructure. The New York-based MatchbookFX--which
lists hedge funds, banks and retail and institutional FX traders among its
clients--is a joint effort of three partners: The NexTrade
ECN, an SEC-registered ECN for
"Our
three-way partnership adds a huge value to our organization," says Levy. "Each contributes in its
own right to the team effort, creating the right formula for what we're trying
to accomplish."
In
contrast, GAIN, Reuters and MG Financial have developed most of their systems
in-house. GAIN's in-house staff--which did receive an
assist from a technology "partner" the firm refused to specify--built
the vendor's platform using Java push technology. Via GAIN's
Java-enabled system, information is automatically disseminated to end users.
Differentiating
Factors
Not
surprisingly, all of the FX vendors interviewed by Wall Street & Technology
believe their products and services are different from their competitors.
Reuters says the flexibility of Dealing 3000, combined with its reputation as a
reliable and secure system, make the product one of the premier FX products in
the market. Galant says what sets GAIN apart from its
competitors, among other factors, is its "level of professionalism"
and its dealing methodology. GAIN publishes the same live bid/ask prices to its
entire client base, and allows any client to deal from that price, which means
GAIN cannot "shade" or "read" its customers' positions.
MG
Financial, on the other hand, says it is different because its customers can
deal directly through the service's dealing desks--on a 5 pips spread--or directly
with one another on the IBS system. MatchbookFX, meanwhile, says its best
differentiating factor is its instantaneous execution of trades on its system:
all prices are live. "Situations where buyers and sellers are dealing
directly and instantly on each other's prices are always better than if they
had to go through some middleman marking up the prices," says Levy.
Another
potential differentiating factor for FX vendors is the experience of their
staffs. One of the major concerns of FX investors is the legitimacy and
professional backgrounds of a vendor's management team--especially its traders.
That's why some vendors have staffed their management teams with experienced
Wall Street executives who have years of trading experience.
"Credibility
has been a problem for companies offering FX services," says GAIN's Galant. "There may
have been some undercapitalized deals and questionable dealing practices in the
past that have left customers wondering about credibility. But companies are
working to change that perception, and one way is to assemble a trading team
that is above reproach."
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