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Chapter 24 Specialists. NYSE Structure. 1366 members (specialists & floor brokers) Seat = Member = Right to buy & sell on the NYSE Floor Approximately 3000 listed companies. Specialists. 7 specialist firms Approximately 450 specialists Typically 5 to 10 years on-the-job training
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Chapter 24 Specialists
NYSE Structure • 1366 members (specialists & floor brokers) • Seat = Member = Right to buy & sell on the NYSE Floor • Approximately 3000 listed companies
Specialists • 7 specialist firms • Approximately 450 specialists • Typically 5 to 10 years on-the-job training • Handle equities across all industries • Most individual specialists handle between 3 and 10 stocks
Stocks • Each stock assigned to one firm • Stocks allocated one of two ways: • Allocation interviews • 3-5 Specialist firms participate in 30 minute interviews • Either by phone or in person • Assigned by NYSE Allocation Committee • Each stock trades at one location on floor
Specialists’ affirmative obligations • Specialists are traders of last resort. • Have to quote firm two-sided markets during trading hours. • Specialists have an obligation to smooth prices by intervening to prevent large price reversals (provide price continuity). • Expensive if informed traders in the market. • Profitable if the spread is wide because other traders are distracted.
Exchanges regularly evaluate specialists based on the width of their quotes, the depth at their quotes, and price continuity. • Specialists provides • Liquidity when there are order imbalances • Price continuity • Limit order display • Supposedly stabilize prices
Specialists also do… • Specialists also work orders entrusted to them by floor brokers. Specialists generally charge brokers commissions for these services. • Specialists act as oral bulletin boards for brokers. • Specialists have a responsibility to make sure that all traders follow the exchange rules. • Conduct an orderly market.
Specialists’ negative obligations • Abide by order precedence rules, including public order precedence rule. • Public liquidity preservation principle is typically enforced at primary exchanges. • Specialists can trade only with incoming marketable orders. • Third market dealers and regional specialists are generally not subject to the public liquidity preservation principle.
Specialist privileges • Specialists can engage in: • Speculative trading on their own account based on their ability to predict short-term price changes • Quote-matching (see p. 249) • Cream-skimming - observe broker IDs for incoming market orders and step in front of the book by improving the price • Strategies to take advantage of stop orders
Specialists control the quotes • Limit display to top-of-file – most valuable • Constrained by order exposure rules • Specialists can stop incoming marketable orders. • Specialists conduct the open. • Specialists receive brokerage commissions for system orders. • Specialists have a unique information advantage that they can use to generate dealer profits.
Specialist Profitability: A Challenging Environment • Seat Prices Down 40% from highs • Current return on Specialist Capital near zero
Recent Controversy • Issues surrounding former NYSE CEO Dick Grasso and SEC’s specialist investigation occur simultaneously • Results: • Reputation decline for NYSE • Decline in market share • Dual listing on NASDAQ of 7 stocks • Dramatic decrease in NASDAQ transfers • Despite these issues, NYSE still capturing bulk of IPO volume
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