Time after time ahead of major news, there seems to be someone who knows something before it happens — there seem to be trades that hit too hard and fast before the news is actually made.
This has been going on for a while, and people are finally starting to understand why.
The current target of collective ire is Thomson Reuters. There was some shady trading ahead of the Consumer Confidence number at the end of last month. About a quarter of a second before the number was released, there was an eruption of orders in the SPDR S&P Sector ETF (SPY), the e-Mini (electronically traded futures), and in hundreds of stocks, according to Nanex, a market research firm.
After some digging CNBC's Eamon Javers reported that the source of the early
But Thomson Reuters also provides a service called “ultra-low latency,” which allows premium customers to get numbers like Consumer Confidence and the Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing index number 2 seconds before it's released to the general public for $2,000 a month.
Two seconds in high-frequency trading time is an eternity.
The University of Michigan responded to this by saying, essentially, “we do it because people pay for it.
Richard Curtin, an economist who runs the university's survey, said he knows the deal gives an advantage to select investors.
“Hardly anyone would pay for it if they didn't see a profit motive,” Mr. Curtin said. Later, he added: “This research is totally funded by private sources for the benefit of scientific analysis, to assess public policy, and to advance business interests. Without a source of revenue, the project would cease to exist and the benefits would disappear.”
Before we put on our self-righteous anger hats and ride over to Thomson Reuters pitchforks in hand, let's be real. They aren't the only ones doing this.
To get the ISM number early, you also have to pay a $1,025 fee if you don't have a high-speed connection to exchanges, according to The WSJ.
Again, that's if you don't already have one.
See, exchanges have their own form of latency. While Thomson Reuters is assisting firms trading on news (a strategy called “event jumping” and/or “news feed trades”), exchanges have admitted to allowing latency based on when they send out
Scott Patterson from The Wall Street Journal reported this in early May, and barely anyone made a peep. The CME even admitted that there are “times when customers experience a latency of a few milliseconds between the time they receive their trade confirmations and when the information is accessible on the public feeds.”
Traders have a bunch of strategies for how to take advantage of this information, but it's really all the same thing — some people have information before other people. Not because they're smart, but because they pay for that privilege.
CNBC's John Carney compared that to the “expert networks” under major scrutiny by regulators and the infamous Goldman Sachs “trading huddles,” in which research analysts met to pass tips on to traders and favored clients, and for which Goldman was fined tens of millions of dollars.
When it comes to latency, regulators have really done nothing. There are no rules. It's the Wild Wild West. Commodities Futures Trading Commission head Bart Chilton was on CNBC this morning and basically said ... “welp, this sucks guys, but you're on your own for now.”
Here's a transcript of the conversation he had with Kayla Taucshe and Andrew Ross Sorkin (emphasis ours):
Chilton says: “It may not be illegal, but I think it's unfair. Information is a commodity. I mean, forget about an hour-long massage for $100. Thomson Reuters is paying a million dollars to get a two-second advantage from the University of Michigan.”
Sorkin: Right.
Chilton: What that means is that two seconds.
Sorkin: This is the Consumer Confidence survey?
Chilton: Right. That two seconds can impact markets a lot. These are millisecond markets, and two seconds is huge for them.
Sorkin: So my position on this is actually I'm not that bothered by this. I look at the news industry and I say if you want to get Bloomberg News, for example, you have to have a terminal, that's $20,000. You can get this news on the website, but you'll get it later. If you have a Dow Jones terminal, you can get access to Wall Street Journal's stories in advance. All of those things cost money and they are premium tiers for this information. So I'm unclear why we decided this information is somehow more valuable or a public good than other news organizations.
Put news organizations aside. Dana Telsey who is an analyst in the retail business — she does a survey. She is constantly surveying retailers. If you pay for the research you get the research. If you don't pay for it, you don't get it.
Tausche: Bloomberg News owns Bloomberg News stories. This is Thomson Reuters taking third-party information.
Sorkin: This is buying it the same way if I were to hire five reporters to go do the survey. I'm hiring the University of Michigan to go do the survey. It's the same thing.
Chilton: Keep in mind what you're saying ... and look, it's a debate. And we're gonna do a concept release on a bunch of these technology issues in a month or so. And I'll be talking about it in a week, with regard to our fine furry friend the cheetahs. But, it's all about money. Right? So, if you have the money to afford these extra services — if you can have five reporters, if you can have a supercomputer and do high speed trading, yeah, you can be in the markets. Is that really where we wanna go, Andrew? That you have to have the money, that you have to have the best, fastest computers?
So that's the question here — do we want the market to be a meritocracy or do we want to surrender it to the robots — actually not even the robots, the people who can pay for them.
Bloomberg News editor Matt Winkler sent a letter to the University of Michigan arguing that, while there are no specific regulations about latency, it seems to be a violation of a more general
From the letter:
This doesn't contribute to a fully informed market as required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Selective Disclosure and Insider Trading Rule. Regulation FD, as it is called, was approved by the SEC in August 2000 partly in response to reporting by Bloomberg News that showed the wide prevalence of selective disclosure of material information.
And for all the cynics out there — yes, there have always been ways for people to pay to game the market. But there are regulations for them. That's the difference here. We have to strive to be better, for now, in this case we're not even trying.
You can check out how crazy trading gets ahead of important news (in this case Consumer Confidence) in the video below, provided by Nanex.