Broadband bargain

From Forbes magazine, May 3, 1999 HERE IS A WAY to ride the broadband wave without buying a moneylosing company like At Home Corp. Horsham, Pa.-based General Instrument (NYSE: GIC) controls 60% of the settop cable box market. Its new boxes will have high-speed modems inside that allow subscribers to surf the Web, get e-mail, … Continue reading Broadband bargain

Pink Sheet Company Is Seeing More Black An Old-Fashioned Marketplace Is Going High-Tech

From Traders Magazine, March 1999 issue Lured by the benefits of using digital technology instead of paper for publishing its stock quotes and obviously eyeing more subscribers the National Quotation Bureau’s (NQB) Pink Sheets are being automated. Beginning next month, the 3,000 companies traded on the Pink Sheets a subset of the non-Nasdaq over-the-counter market … Continue reading Pink Sheet Company Is Seeing More Black An Old-Fashioned Marketplace Is Going High-Tech

Nasdaq Prepares for Web Market Making: Pilot Program Is Prologue to Trading-Cost Reductions

From Trader’s Magazine, October 1998 issue Nasdaq will learn next year just how well an Internet-based market-making trading system performs. Several Nasdaq trading desks are among the guinea pigs for a pilot program aimed at testing the reliability and security of the Internet-based successor to Nasdaq’s Level II workstation. And the results of the pilot … Continue reading Nasdaq Prepares for Web Market Making: Pilot Program Is Prologue to Trading-Cost Reductions

Bright Side of Upheaval In Order Management: BRASS, the Industry Standard, Faces Competition

From Sept 1998 issue of Traders Magazine Ten years ago, Automated Securities Clearance was a small but pushy software company that competed for order-management business with TCAM Systems. How times have changed. Weehawken, N.J.-based Automated is no longer an upstart, peddling its core BRASS system and order-routing services. BRASS now overshadows the rival product of … Continue reading Bright Side of Upheaval In Order Management: BRASS, the Industry Standard, Faces Competition

Microsoft’s Competition With UNIX Is Heating Up:First Union Is Switching to Software Giant’s Windows NT

From Traders Magazine, August 1998 issue Wrestling with a long tradition of Wall Street competition, Microsoft is dipping into a $1 billion development budget hoping to snatch more lucrative broker-dealer business. The Redmond, Wash.-based software giant’s goal: getting technology departments to reverse their preference for UNIX-based software solutions over Microsoft products. Wall Street, to be … Continue reading Microsoft’s Competition With UNIX Is Heating Up:First Union Is Switching to Software Giant’s Windows NT

The Mixed Blessing of Technology Spending:Desks Must Spend on Technology to Remain Competitive

Huge mainframes. Fiber-optic networks. State-of-the-art telecommunication systems. Worldwide market news delivered real-time. Sound familiar? It should. These and more are at the very heart of a Nasdaq trading room. Back in the pioneer days, much of what is today’s Nasdaq trading-room technology did not exist. By contrast, some of today’s technology has a pedestrian aura. … Continue reading The Mixed Blessing of Technology Spending:Desks Must Spend on Technology to Remain Competitive

A Price War Planned By New STRIKE ECN: Bear Stearns’ ECN is Taking Aim at Rival Systems

From Traders Magazine, June 1998 issue As STRIKE, the name on the hottest new electronic communications network (ECN) simply suggests, Bear, Stearns & Co. is planning for war – a price war. STRIKE, the ECN sponsored by Bear Stearns, is going live this summer backed by some of the New York-based firm’s Wall Street peers. … Continue reading A Price War Planned By New STRIKE ECN: Bear Stearns’ ECN is Taking Aim at Rival Systems

A New System Promises To Police Trading Abuse:But Sending Real-Time Trade Data to Regulators Will Be Costly

From Traders Magazine, April 1998 issue Traders hate rude interruptions. A breakdown in market-data systems leads to pandemonium. A faulty telephone connection is taboo. So it is with a certain resignation that Nasdaq market makers are bracing for another interruption, and with nary a word of protest the implementation of the Order Audit Trail System, … Continue reading A New System Promises To Police Trading Abuse:But Sending Real-Time Trade Data to Regulators Will Be Costly

Market Vendors Making Information More Usable: Open and Flexible Systems Are the Ticket for Busy Traders

From Traders Magazine, February 1998 issue Traders are busy people, swamped in market data. So how do they find time to use this data effectively? Try market-data systems that are open, interactive and easily welded to other systems and information sources. Speed and flexibility are the big kahuna. In what may be a backlash against … Continue reading Market Vendors Making Information More Usable: Open and Flexible Systems Are the Ticket for Busy Traders

: Will OptiMark Support the Super-Anonymous Hype?

From Traders Magazine, October 1997 issue When the Pacific Stock Exchange (PCX) received Securities and Exchange Commission approval last month to operate the OptiMark trading system, the pioneer of the new electronic facility, William Lupien, breathed a sigh of relief. This was one of the many hurdles Lupien had to overcome before his latest brainchild, … Continue reading : Will OptiMark Support the Super-Anonymous Hype?