Crisis sparks reversal in electronic trading-study

Wed Dec 3, 2008 9:30am EST
 
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By Jonathan Spicer

NEW YORK, Dec 3 (Reuters) - The earthquake that shook markets this year drove increasingly computer-oriented investors back to more traditional trading methods, a study of U.S. equity trading has found.

TABB Group's annual U.S. Institutional Equity Trading study, published on Wednesday, found that so called buy-side asset managers -- including mutual funds, pension funds, and registered investment advisers -- reversed an aggressive trend toward electronic trading.

From January until the end of October of this year, 44 percent of buy-side trading volume on the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market was electronic, down from 51 percent last year, the study found.

Electronic trading rose during the recent bull market from 27 percent in 2005 to 44 percent in 2006. But the credit crisis and volatile sell-off this year has changed that.

"What happens is everybody gets gun shy because of a lack of confidence ... over the direction of the price," said Laurie Berke, author of the study and senior consultant at TABB Group, a U.S.-based research and consulting firm.

"In such a difficult environment that we've had this year, there was a renewed demand for any and all information that a sell-side trader could provide."

In August and September, TABB interviewed 61 head traders at firms that manage a total of $12.9 trillion and invest primarily for the long term. It found that the buy side accounts for some 35 percent of overall trading volume, down slightly due to the growth of hedge funds.

The findings suggested investors still look to traditional sell-side brokers when markets become unpredictable, even as markets go electronic and trading is measured in fractions of seconds.

The traditional broker has access to more market information and takes time to talk to institutional investors.

TABB's study classified as "electronic" trading methods the following: computerized models known as algorithms; buy-side firms' direct market access tools; and alternative trading systems that match buy and sell orders outside of formal exchanges.

The use of algorithms, which allow computers to make trading decisions, accounted for 24 percent of buy-side activity, up slightly from 22 percent last year and 21 percent in 2006.

TEMPORARY REVERSAL

The mortgage market-inspired credit crisis brought record volatility to world stock markets this year. Wall Street investment bank Bear Stearns was sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N), while Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc (LEHMQ.PK) sought bankruptcy protection, setting off an unprecedented drop in equities.

"This was an extraordinary year," said Berke. "In aggregate, I would expect that we'll see electronic trading resume its growth curve."

Automated trading could be declining because quant funds, which trade based on complex statistical models, are deleveraging as the overall market tumbles, said Diego Perfumo, an analyst at Equity Research Desk, a Connecticut-based advisory firm specializing in exchanges.  Continued...

 
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