November 28, 2018 | | | | Spencer Doar Editor John Lothian News | |
|
| | Observations & Insight | | Saliba's Execution Fight Gears Up Spencer Doar - John Lothian News Anthony Saliba returned to the broker-dealer business in September 2017 by starting Matrix Executions. He had sworn he would never would come back to the space. Saliba had already conquered the challenge as CEO of LiquidPoint - which at its peak handled a fifth of U.S. options flow. Liquidpoint would eventually become apart of Dash Financial Technologies in 2017. Saliba competes with Dash, fighting a battle with a company that can trace part of its history directly back to him. Now, he has another vote of confidence in his year old venture as Mishkin, Anderson and Gray Securities (MAGS), operator of market making firm Simplex Trading, "made [him] an offer [he] couldn't refuse" to become minority owners in Matrix. The deal is pending FINRA approval. For the rest of the story go here. ****SD: JLN spoke with Saliba shortly after the launch of Matrix - see that video here.
| | | Lead Stories | | Stock options traders brace for volatility ahead of G20 summit Saqib Iqbal Ahmed - Reuters U.S. options traders have their eyes firmly fixed on Buenos Aires this week, and they are increasingly confident the meeting there of the heads of the world's 20 largest economies means one thing: more volatility. /goo.gl/EKv8TB ****SD: BloombergQuint has Goldman Crunches Data to Pick the Best Trades for a G20 Rally Biggest Pay Raise on Wall Street Goes to Stock Derivatives Traders; Increasingly choppy markets are proving to be a boon to these traders at the biggest banks Telis Demos and Gunjan Banerji - WSJ (SUBSCRIPTION) As markets get wilder, some Wall Street traders are getting richer. The return of volatility might be making many rank-and-file investors queasy, but it is proving to be a boon to some trading desks at the biggest banks. /on.wsj.com/2FMYteL ****SD: I bet everybody wants their Secret Santa to be an equity derivatives trader. Options Show Complacency Reigns Supreme in Battered U.S. Stocks Luke Kawa - BloombergQuint It's just a correction -- not the start of something deeper. Looking at trading in U.S. equity derivatives, there are few signs of fear even on the heels of a double-digit drawdown in the S&P 500 Index and Nasdaq 100 Index. /goo.gl/jzkMT8 ****SD: I suppose years of a "buy the dip" mentality can't be shaken by a one-month hiccup. To Sniff Out Insider Trading, Follow the Options Market; How algorithmic sleuths use artificial intelligence to expose suspicious activity related to mergers and acquisitions. Matthew A. Winkler - BloombergQuint Insider trading involves illegal profiting from nonpublic information by people buying and selling shares. It typically increases whenever companies are busy acquiring each other. The 42 percent rise in the Russell 3000 index during the 24 months through September included the most mergers and acquisitions in 12 years. Now the technology that created artificial intelligence is getting good at detecting stock market fluctuations that can only be explained as abnormal, sophisticated and nefarious. /goo.gl/dV9EMc ****SD: It isn't that algorithms see things that we can't, it's that machine learning and the like can scrub through a bazillion bytes of data much faster. For instance, in the examples given, one illiquid name saw its put/call ratio explode to 67 (67 puts traded per call) and another name saw its options volume jump to six times the usual - both without any market-moving news out at the time of the trading. These would be worth flagging to any human glancing at the data. But we need to know where to direct our eyes. Heck, I stumbled across an odd instance  yesterday someone bought ~2,800 Feb 105 strike Ferrari (RACE) calls. The ADV for RACE is 667. Today, RACE opened at 102 and is now up past 107 (as of this writing). It could just be a great trade, but as I said, in order to determine that, you need to know where to look. CAT Is Out of the Bag Ivy Schmerken - Traders Magazine Despite a one-year delay and other missed deadlines, the order-tracking system known as the Continuous Audit Trail is back on track as exchanges were due to begin reporting required equities and options data into the CAT on Nov. 15. /goo.gl/yDZZ9F ****SD: Now that it's out of the bag, which is the best way to skin it? European markets becalmed as US volatility surges; US Vix index has traditionally traded below its European counterpart but that has changed Robin Wigglesworth - Financial Times (SUBSCRIPTION) Europe's volatility index is trading well below its more famous US counterpart, reversing their usual relationship and highlighting how the post-crisis market dynamics have been upended this year. /goo.gl/kK1APT What's Making Hedge Funds Weep Al Root - Barron's There's no crying on Wall Street. Except, perhaps, when a hedge fund's investment goes so spectacularly wrong that it's forced to shut down. Most hedge funds haven't gone to that extreme, of course. But returns at hedge funds since the financial crisis have been underwhelming. Two weeks ago, hedge fund OptionsSellers.com was forced to liquidate its positions after making wrong-way bets on energy, according to The Wall Street Journal. That led James Cordier, its lead manager, to record a tearful apology to his clients lamenting the loss of his business. bit.ly/2zuD30k ****SD: From Bloomberg: Hedge Funds Got What they Wanted, to Their Cost Investment product of the year: JP Morgan US Volatility Momentum QES Index Series Risk.net When Vix shot from 17 to 37 in one trading day on February 5 this year, driven partly by a technical feedback loop as XIV exchange-traded notes collapsed in value, the first question asked was 'who saw it coming?'. The second was whether they did something about it. Some did. "We downloaded the XIV prospectus and found the clause saying that if it lost 80% intraday they would start liquidating," says one portfolio manager at a US asset manager. With Vix trading at around eight or nine versus a historical average around 20, such losses seemed plausible. bit.ly/2zw1Lh8 ****JB: Here's a complete list of Risk Awards 2019 ***SD: There's a wealth of unpaywalled information in the Risk.net descriptions of the winners. Curious about what Citadel's been up to? Read about its flow market-making. Wondering who seized the opportunity presented by the Turkish lira crash? Check out currency derivatives house of the year BNP Paribas. Want to know why JPMorgan went long vol before the Feb spike? See its writeup. Oil Investors Still on Edge, Waiting on OPEC's Word Devika Krishna Kumar - Reuters Global oil markets are nervously eyeing OPEC's upcoming meeting for clarity on future supply as the dust settles after a full-fledged rout in crude markets over the last several weeks. /goo.gl/a1M9hH
| | | Exchanges and Clearing | | N.J. federal judge disqualifies law firm in Nasdaq patent case Dena Aubin - Reuters A magistrate judge was right to disqualify intellectual property law firm Fish & Richardson from helping to defend options exchange owner Miami International Holdings in a patent and trade secrets lawsuit by Nasdaq, a federal judge in Trenton ruled. /reut.rs/2E2C2jZ MSCI EM Index Options Record Cboe via Twitter On Nov. 26, Cboe options on the MSCI Emerging Markets Index set new all-time one-day records for both volume and open interest. /goo.gl/1VS8mr Adena Friedman Elected as a Class B Director to New York Fed Board of Directors Federal Reserve Bank of New York The Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced that Adena T. Friedman, president and chief executive officer of Nasdaq, Inc., has been elected a Class B director representing Group 2 which consists of banks with capital and surplus between $40 million and $2 billion. Ms. Friedman will fill the unexpired portion of David Cote's term that ends December 31, 2019. /nyfed.org/2FJoKuo
| | | Regulation & Enforcement | | FIA issues updated CCP risk management recommendations FIA FIA today published a series of recommendations to improve clearinghouse risk management following recent market developments. Today's paper is an update to a 2015 series of recommendations. Central counterparties (CCPs) are key institutions in the global financial system and their importance has only grown since the G-20 group of nations mandated the clearing of certain products as a way to build in safety and soundness to the global financial system. bit.ly/2ztUbDG Walt Lukken's opening remarks at Asia 2018 FIA Welcome everyone to the 14th annual Asia Derivatives Conference. I'm proud to announce that this year's conference sets another record for us with over 800 attendees registered. Thank you, David for that kind introduction. I also want to recognize Bill Herder and his staff here in Singapore for the incredible work they do in putting together this conference every year. There is a very popular movie currently out that is based here in Singapore depicting the lives of the super wealthy. I cannot relate to this movie. Instead of "Crazy Rich Asians," my life would be better described as "Crazy Nerdy American." bit.ly/2zubsg3
| | | Technology | | Risk Markets Technology Awards 2019: Vendors enter the pick-and-mix era Risk.net Modular tech and micro-services - plus new risk and regulatory needs - are creating openings for insurgents and incumbents bit.ly/2E3YedM ****SD: Rundown of all of Risk.net's tech award winners - Hanweck nabbed the pricing and analytics: equities award. OpenGamma expands into the US Bailey McCann - Opalesque London-based derivatives analytics company, OpenGamma is expanding into the US. The company says its expansion plans come as regulatory and macroeconomic pressures continue to hit hedge funds and asset managers with offices all over the world. /goo.gl/pzRejy Bloomberg Makes Real-Time Data Available On The Cloud; Efficient delivery of comprehensive market data enables front office to accelerate time to value Markets Insider Bloomberg announced today that its flagship real-time market data feed, B-PIPE, is now available on the cloud, offering customers a high-performance solution that delivers instant and reliable access to crucial trading data. /read.bi/2TNq6aC
| | | Miscellaneous | | E. Matthew "Whiz" Buckley of Top Gun Options Honored as "Hero Among Us" at Florida Panthers Game PRNewswire The Florida Panthers honored retired Navy fighter pilot, Lieutenant E. Matthew "Whiz" Buckley during the Panthers' 7 PM home game versus the New Jersey Devils Monday, November 26th as part of their "Heroes Among Us" program. /on.mktw.net/2FLFIbO BOE Warns Disorderly Brexit Could Unleash a Savage Recession Andrew Atkinson - Bloomberg The U.K. could suffer the worst economic slump since at least World War II if Prime Minister Theresa May fails to get her Brexit plan past lawmakers and the country crashes out of the European Union without a deal. /bloom.bg/2RrDu2o ****JB: Also from Bloomberg, No-Deal Brexit Could Wipe 10.7% Off U.K. Economy Over 15 Years Trump slams Fed chair, questions climate change and threatens to cancel Putin meeting in wide-ranging interview with The Post Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey and Damian Paletta - The Washington Post (SUBSCRIPTION) President Trump placed responsibility for recent stock market declines and this week's announcement of General Motors plant closures and layoffs on the Federal Reserve during an interview Tuesday, shirking any personal blame for cracks in the economy and declaring that he is "not even a little bit happy" with his hand-selected central bank chairman. /wapo.st/2E52GZy ****SD: CNBC with an unpaywalled take here. Bloomberg's outlook - U.S. Needs Trump-Putin Meeting as Much as Russia, Kremlin Says
| | | | | JLN Options is sponsored by: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|
|
| | | |
| | John Lothian News (JLN) is the news division of John J. Lothian & Company, Inc. (JJLCO). The online media and financial services firm is staffed by derivatives industry, journalism and technology professionals. | | | | John Lothian News Editorial Staff: | | John Lothian Publisher | | Sarah Rudolph Managing Editor
| | Jeff Bergstrom Editor
| | Spencer Doar Editor
| |
|
|
Disclaimer: All John Lothian Newsletters, JohnLothianNews.com, MarketsWiki.com and MarketsReformWiki.com are products of John Lothian News, a division of John J. Lothian & Company, Inc. The opinions expressed in all John J. Lothian & Company, Inc. publications are strictly those of their respective editors. They are intended solely for informative purposes and are not to be construed, under any circumstances, by implication or otherwise, as an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy or trade in any commodities or securities herein named. Information is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but is in no way guaranteed. No guarantee of any kind is implied or possible where projections of future conditions are attempted. Security futures are not suitable for all customers. Futures and options trading involve risk. Past results are no indication of future performance. Nothing on any John J. Lothian & Company site should be considered an endorsement by any sponsor of any website or newsletter content. © 2017 John J. Lothian & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
|
|