NEWS ANALYSIS Better Late Than Never: Levitt Knocks Markets

Apr 18, 2001 12:00 PM


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines  

Jan. 9, 2001 SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt Jr. yesterday took a swipe at the equity markets in a speech delivered at Stanford University.

The commission at the same time released a study purporting to show that Nasdaq spreads are sometimes higher, while the NYSE’s executions are sometimes slower. The long-awaited study set off a predictable follow-up skirmish between the two market centers.

Meanwhile, Levitt addressed a wide range of equity market structure issues at the Stanford Law School gathering. He noted that the 1975 amendments to the ’34 Act directed the SEC to facilitate a "national market system" of electronically linked markets that allowed investors to bypass dealers and specialists where possible.

But to this day, no such system exists. And as he prepares to leave office, Levitt is still wringing his hands. He criticized markets for refusing to make reforms that were not in their financial interests. "Individual competitive interests cannot always be relied upon to produce a basic framework for competition that serves the public," Levitt said. The SEC’s role, he said, is to be the "catalyst for market infrastructure refinements."

But exactly how the soon-to-be-Levitt-less SEC will successfully tackle the Wall Street status quo after failing to do so for 25 years remains to be seen. Levitt himself was slow to jump on the reform bandwagon. His agency began its investigation of market makers’ collusion in 1994 only after the Justice Department had begun its own inquiry. And Levitt sided with Nasdaq and the NYSE in delaying decimalization--despite bipartisan calls from Congress for penny pricing.

In a parting shot to the NYSE, Levitt took to task the exchange’s continued lack of access to non-members (Nasdaq allows more access to competing trading systems like ECNs). Public access to order flow is a critical element in breaking down walls.

"Without a doubt, the issue of access in the listed market will confront my successor sooner rather than later," Levitt said.

The Intermarket Trading System currently links exchanges and can deliver orders to a trading floor, but what happens then is left to the particular exchange. The system carries virtually no traffic. Critics deride the two-decade-old ITS concept as purposefully flawed, designed to deny outside access and maintain market centers’ control, while seemingly fulfilling Congress’ call for a national market system.

Levitt also criticized the private process by which market centers collect, price and disseminate market data. Reformers have called on the SEC to treat market data like a public good; market centers shun such talk, as the sale of data is a huge revenue item. Levitt suggested that the collection and distribution of data be opened up to outside vendors. -- Dan Jamieson

Editor's note: For any comments regarding this article, or to suggest a story idea for RR Online or Registered Representative magazine, contact Editor in Chief Dan Jamieson at dan_jamieson@intertec.com, Online Editor Rick Weinberg at rick_weinberg@intertec.com, Online Managing Editor Cheryl Cooper at cheryl_cooper@intertec.com or Senior Editor Michael Hayes at mike_hayes@intertec.com


Acceptable Use Policy
blog comments powered by Disqus

Current Issue

Registered Rep Cover

Dear Management, Thanks For Nothing.

By Christina Mucciolo
December 1, 2008

In our 18th annual Broker Report Card survey, wirehouse FAs say they are fed up with management ruining their excellent franchises and platforms. Will the great advisor diaspora begin?



browse back issues


Featured Book

Cannon’s Concepts For Professionals: A Complete Library of Essential Financial Concepts 

This reference book was updated for 2008 and now contains over 900 pages of information on essential financial concepts and wealth management strategies for your work with wealthy clients. The book not only contains brief summaries of each topic, but it also contains many useful diagrams and charts that can be used with clients when explaining difficult financial concepts. The information in this book meets current FINRA/NASD guidelines....

Bookstore

Affluent handbook Live Long Live Rich
Mastering High Net Worth Wealth Management team assessment
Back to Top